Thank you Kelsey!
I applied that numbering system to the most prevalent LSAT quantity terms and their logical opposites, fitting most into one of two categories, either those with "100" vs. "0-99" or those "1-100" vs. "0" opposition logically. I just have a less-than-full acceptance concerning how to think about one pair of logical opposites; if you have any advice on how to think about this pair it would be greatly appreciated.
This concerns "any" vs. "not every", as per PrepTest 67, S2,Q14, answer choice "E". This is not the correct answer choice, as its negation doesn't significantly weaken the conclusion of the argument, but considering this reminds me of why the phrase "logical negation" is sometimes used when "logical opposite" should be used instead (please advise if in error). Performing the negation test is when the need for logical opposition usually arises. "Mutually exhausting the domain", Powerscore's other way of summarizing the considerations herein, as per
https://blog.powerscore.com/lsat/negati ... tatements/ , helps complete my thought here...almost. I can think of "not every" as referring to any number of moieties between 0 and 99, and "any" becomes "any (one)" and occupies spot 100 in this construct. "Not every" is grouped with "not all" and I can see that. "Any" is grouped with "all" and I could just unflinchingly accept that, but I can only seem to accept it as "any (one)" in logical opposition to "not every", and I still do not feel 100% certain about my thinking here. I can accept All, Always and Everywhere as 100 in their logical opposition pairs, but not sure if my "any (one) occupying spot 100" in its construct is the best way to think about that.