- Wed Jun 26, 2013 11:17 pm
#9895
Hey everyone,
I have been reading the PS Logical Reasoning Bible and just came to logical opposites and I am confused about the relationship between contrapositive and the logical opposite of a statement.
Example:
Original Statement: A B
Contrapositive: not B not A
So I would assume that the logical opposite of both these statements would yield similar/same outcome. Instead, when I negate the second element, I get two different statements.
Logical opposite-original statement: A not B
Logical opposite- contrapositive: not B A
The logical opposite of the contrapositive looks like a mistaken reversal!
Now I know that the logical opposite looks to negate the necessary condition, and therefore I could just ignore the the contrapositive's logical opposite. Still, I do not understand why the two are not the same - why can't I treat the contrapositive's necessary condition (not A) and negate it to make the logical opposite?
I have been reading the PS Logical Reasoning Bible and just came to logical opposites and I am confused about the relationship between contrapositive and the logical opposite of a statement.
Example:
Original Statement: A B
Contrapositive: not B not A
So I would assume that the logical opposite of both these statements would yield similar/same outcome. Instead, when I negate the second element, I get two different statements.
Logical opposite-original statement: A not B
Logical opposite- contrapositive: not B A
The logical opposite of the contrapositive looks like a mistaken reversal!
Now I know that the logical opposite looks to negate the necessary condition, and therefore I could just ignore the the contrapositive's logical opposite. Still, I do not understand why the two are not the same - why can't I treat the contrapositive's necessary condition (not A) and negate it to make the logical opposite?