- Wed Feb 19, 2020 2:49 pm
#73945
In the reading, either/or is described with "Either John or Jack will attend..." being diagrammed as ~John-->Jack contrapositive ~Jack--> John. In the drill, the sentence "Either Jones or Kim will win the election." is diagrammed as ~Jones-->Kim contrapositive ~Kim-->Jones.
This means that if Jones wins, nothing happens. I understand that it's possible for both to win, but would it be wrong to diagram it as Jones-->~Kim? If so, why would it be wrong and what is the reason for negating the first term in those scenarios?
This means that if Jones wins, nothing happens. I understand that it's possible for both to win, but would it be wrong to diagram it as Jones-->~Kim? If so, why would it be wrong and what is the reason for negating the first term in those scenarios?