- Wed Jun 08, 2016 9:34 am
#26270
Hi al_godnessmary,
Thanks for your question.
Yes, you mistook a sufficient condition for a necessary condition. We are told that any store that sells tropical fish but not exotic birds sells gerbils. So:
fish + ~birds gerbils.
But it sounds like you misread that as ONLY those stores which sell fish but not birds sell gerbils, which would look like this:
gerbils fish + ~birds
and would give us the contrapositive,
birds or ~fish ~gerbils.
I think that is the source of your mistake.
Remember, to say 'any X is Y' and to say 'only X are Y' are two very different statements. I think what you did here was confuse the two.
I hope that helps.
Thanks for your question.
Yes, you mistook a sufficient condition for a necessary condition. We are told that any store that sells tropical fish but not exotic birds sells gerbils. So:
fish + ~birds gerbils.
But it sounds like you misread that as ONLY those stores which sell fish but not birds sell gerbils, which would look like this:
gerbils fish + ~birds
and would give us the contrapositive,
birds or ~fish ~gerbils.
I think that is the source of your mistake.
Remember, to say 'any X is Y' and to say 'only X are Y' are two very different statements. I think what you did here was confuse the two.
I hope that helps.