- Sat Jan 05, 2013 6:23 pm
#7072
Greetings and Happy New Year.
So far the LRB has pretty airtight.
However, this statement on page 376 which I've seen mentioned prior is not holding up to me: "Remember, a Mistaken Negation and a Mistaken Reversal are contrapositives to eachother..."
Let's take a look at this diagramatically:
Conditional:
A B this equals it's contrapositive B A which equals of course A <----- B
To be sure as per LGB 29:
"A contra positive denies the necessary condition thereby making it impossible for the sufficient condition to occur"
and
"Because the contrapositive both reverses and negates it is a combination of a Mistaken Reversal and Mistaken Negation. Since the contrapositive is valid, it as if two wrongs do make a right."
This is not entirely clear (or correct!?! (brass I know)) to say because the Mistaken Negation "plus" the Mistaken Reversal don't equal the same, valid conditional of a negated NC contrapositive which forces the SC into negation.
My position elucidated: Let's take look at the Mistaken Negation of the above original conditional A B
If A B this MN would then as a next step force A B
but
the contrapositive A B is in fact B A
Now again, you say as per above "Remember, a Mistaken Negation and a Mistaken Reversal are contrapositives to eachother..." (LR 376)
Well the Mistaken Reversal of A B is B A (A <---- B) and the contrapositive of B A is of course A B
Now "clearly" this Mistaken Reversal is not the contrapositive of the Mistaken Negation above (A B ).
The Mistaken Reversal can never be the "contrapositive" of Mistaken Negation - as an MR is never negated by simply being reversed - no matter which way you point the arrow. And of course if you take the "contrapositive" of the Mistaken Reversal - both conditions are negated resulting in A B not just one as in the MN A B.
So I find this LRB 'sidebar' concept flawed.
Ironically it was placed in the Flaw in the Reasoning Section.
To make this an interrogatory- how exactly can you convince me that the MN and the MR are contrapositives "of eachother".
I don't really see them as "contrapositives" in any context of a properly inferred conditional statement short of what they are - Mistakes - Mistaken Reversals and Mistaken Negations in of themselves and conditionally dis-related to one another.
Over to you, boss.
So far the LRB has pretty airtight.
However, this statement on page 376 which I've seen mentioned prior is not holding up to me: "Remember, a Mistaken Negation and a Mistaken Reversal are contrapositives to eachother..."
Let's take a look at this diagramatically:
Conditional:
A B this equals it's contrapositive B A which equals of course A <----- B
To be sure as per LGB 29:
"A contra positive denies the necessary condition thereby making it impossible for the sufficient condition to occur"
and
"Because the contrapositive both reverses and negates it is a combination of a Mistaken Reversal and Mistaken Negation. Since the contrapositive is valid, it as if two wrongs do make a right."
This is not entirely clear (or correct!?! (brass I know)) to say because the Mistaken Negation "plus" the Mistaken Reversal don't equal the same, valid conditional of a negated NC contrapositive which forces the SC into negation.
My position elucidated: Let's take look at the Mistaken Negation of the above original conditional A B
If A B this MN would then as a next step force A B
but
the contrapositive A B is in fact B A
Now again, you say as per above "Remember, a Mistaken Negation and a Mistaken Reversal are contrapositives to eachother..." (LR 376)
Well the Mistaken Reversal of A B is B A (A <---- B) and the contrapositive of B A is of course A B
Now "clearly" this Mistaken Reversal is not the contrapositive of the Mistaken Negation above (A B ).
The Mistaken Reversal can never be the "contrapositive" of Mistaken Negation - as an MR is never negated by simply being reversed - no matter which way you point the arrow. And of course if you take the "contrapositive" of the Mistaken Reversal - both conditions are negated resulting in A B not just one as in the MN A B.
So I find this LRB 'sidebar' concept flawed.
Ironically it was placed in the Flaw in the Reasoning Section.
To make this an interrogatory- how exactly can you convince me that the MN and the MR are contrapositives "of eachother".
I don't really see them as "contrapositives" in any context of a properly inferred conditional statement short of what they are - Mistakes - Mistaken Reversals and Mistaken Negations in of themselves and conditionally dis-related to one another.
Over to you, boss.