- Wed Apr 05, 2017 4:57 pm
#33923
Hi mankariousc,
You are correct. The logical opposite of "at least one" or "some" is "none." Here, the original statement is "Some of the social ills that currently afflict the nation do not pose a direct threat to the nation's existence." which would be negated to "None of the social ills that currently afflict the nation do not pose a direct threat to the nation's existence."
But that sounds a little funny because of the double negative! So you can rewrite that as "Some of the social ills that currently afflict the nation do post a direct threat to the nation's existence." It's like saying "Nobody ate nothing for dinner." What that really means is that at least someone ate something for dinner. Double negatives are confusing, and we don't like them!
You are correct. The logical opposite of "at least one" or "some" is "none." Here, the original statement is "Some of the social ills that currently afflict the nation do not pose a direct threat to the nation's existence." which would be negated to "None of the social ills that currently afflict the nation do not pose a direct threat to the nation's existence."
But that sounds a little funny because of the double negative! So you can rewrite that as "Some of the social ills that currently afflict the nation do post a direct threat to the nation's existence." It's like saying "Nobody ate nothing for dinner." What that really means is that at least someone ate something for dinner. Double negatives are confusing, and we don't like them!