- Tue Oct 22, 2019 5:48 pm
#71424
Hello,
I am going through the Formal Logic Test Preparation that is located in the 8th lesson and came across the Logic Ladder and had a question. On page 12, at the bottom, in the example of all Doctors are Lawyers. I saw that through the logical ladder it could be deduced that
[*]Doctors ---> Lawyers
[*]Doctors ---M--> Lawyers
[*]Doctors --S--> Lawyers.
Later in the explanation, it states that because in the last example of Some Doctors are Lawyers it can also be assumed that Some Lawyers are Doctors. I wanted to know if this would apply to all logical reasoning that contained the word (all). I have never noticed that this was possible and it is so great to know. Because in the lesson we are taught that (some statements) are the ONLY reversible relationship.
Also, how would this apply if instead of all it said No/None?
Is there a logical ladder for None?
I am going through the Formal Logic Test Preparation that is located in the 8th lesson and came across the Logic Ladder and had a question. On page 12, at the bottom, in the example of all Doctors are Lawyers. I saw that through the logical ladder it could be deduced that
[*]Doctors ---> Lawyers
[*]Doctors ---M--> Lawyers
[*]Doctors --S--> Lawyers.
Later in the explanation, it states that because in the last example of Some Doctors are Lawyers it can also be assumed that Some Lawyers are Doctors. I wanted to know if this would apply to all logical reasoning that contained the word (all). I have never noticed that this was possible and it is so great to know. Because in the lesson we are taught that (some statements) are the ONLY reversible relationship.
Also, how would this apply if instead of all it said No/None?
Is there a logical ladder for None?