- Tue May 29, 2018 2:21 pm
#46002
The following example is on page 73 of the Logic Games Bible:
"G cannot be cleaned until F is cleaned, unless F is cleaned second."
The book says that this can be diagrammed in the following way: (G -- F) --> F2 (imagine the 2 is a subscript).
I'm confused by this because:
Step 1: "G cannot be cleaned until F is cleaned" ... this contains "until" so I thought that this part of the sentence would be diagrammed G -- F. ("Until" negates the sufficient condition.)
Step 2: "Unless F is cleaned second." Because of "unless," I thought that this should negate the first part of the sentence. So I thought that (G -- F) should be turned into a negative. But the book doesn't do this... it keeps (G -- F) as it is in Step 1.
Can someone please explain?
Thank you!
"G cannot be cleaned until F is cleaned, unless F is cleaned second."
The book says that this can be diagrammed in the following way: (G -- F) --> F2 (imagine the 2 is a subscript).
I'm confused by this because:
Step 1: "G cannot be cleaned until F is cleaned" ... this contains "until" so I thought that this part of the sentence would be diagrammed G -- F. ("Until" negates the sufficient condition.)
Step 2: "Unless F is cleaned second." Because of "unless," I thought that this should negate the first part of the sentence. So I thought that (G -- F) should be turned into a negative. But the book doesn't do this... it keeps (G -- F) as it is in Step 1.
Can someone please explain?
Thank you!