- Sun Oct 25, 2020 11:57 am
#80338
***This note you're reading is being written after I wrote the body of my post. I THOUGHT I had a grasp on this but as I wrote this post I have just REALLY confused myself to the point I am not even sure what I am asking anymore, so I will try to clarify some main points I THINK I have.
Can I always take the contrapositive of a double arrow ?
Can I take a contrapositive of a double-not arrow ?
(If I can, do I do something funky with negating the not* in the double-not arrow thus making it a double arrow ?
Why when two things are mutually exclusive, and one MUST occur, do you not use a ?
I have two sets of two scenarios I'm not too clear on when I try to compare them.
1.
Either Cindy or Clarice will attend the party, but not both.
versus
If Gomez runs for president, then Hong will not run for president.
I really want to diagram the first as:
Cindy Clarice
Contrapositive
NOT Clarice NOT Cindy
To me the initial diagram says one person WILL attend the party, the other CANNOT be attend the party.
And the contrapositive says if one does NOT go to the party, then the other MUST go to the party. They CANNOT both NOT go. I thought that was what signifies.
Compared to:
If Gomez runs for president, then Hong will not run for president. This IS diagramed as G H
Now I'm confused about the contrapositive! NOT H NOT G.....this doesn't seem right to me. That says that one of them MUST run for president, but G NOT H allows for the possibility of NEITHER running.
Is it because the President example is conditional on whether one runs in the first place? Whereas, the Party example has one person going for certain?
2.
Either Jones or Kim will win the election.
versus
It is either feast or famine.
***I completely understand you do NOT want a double-not arrow because we do not know the ramifications of what they are being elected for and their COULD BE multiple people elected, like the school board the book mentions.
Compared to:
It is either feast or famine.
I want to:
Feast Famine
But, I think I'm wrong because it is not listed as an answer. David addresses that feast and famine are mutually exclusive. So you cannot have both. To me the original statement says that it must be either feast or famine and there is no room in between and my common sense says there can't be both.
My mind is blown. I felt really good about this entire chapter up until this one thing. I think my issue resides in the mutually exclusivity, but I am honestly not even sure anymore. I have reread this section and I am confusing myself even more.
Please do not feel it necessary to respond to each point of this post. If you may be able to explain it in a way I can apply it and figure this out myself, I think that would be really beneficial. But you guys know better than I do!
Thank you so much for any replies.
Can I always take the contrapositive of a double arrow ?
Can I take a contrapositive of a double-not arrow ?
(If I can, do I do something funky with negating the not* in the double-not arrow thus making it a double arrow ?
Why when two things are mutually exclusive, and one MUST occur, do you not use a ?
I have two sets of two scenarios I'm not too clear on when I try to compare them.
1.
Either Cindy or Clarice will attend the party, but not both.
versus
If Gomez runs for president, then Hong will not run for president.
I really want to diagram the first as:
Cindy Clarice
Contrapositive
NOT Clarice NOT Cindy
To me the initial diagram says one person WILL attend the party, the other CANNOT be attend the party.
And the contrapositive says if one does NOT go to the party, then the other MUST go to the party. They CANNOT both NOT go. I thought that was what signifies.
Compared to:
If Gomez runs for president, then Hong will not run for president. This IS diagramed as G H
Now I'm confused about the contrapositive! NOT H NOT G.....this doesn't seem right to me. That says that one of them MUST run for president, but G NOT H allows for the possibility of NEITHER running.
Is it because the President example is conditional on whether one runs in the first place? Whereas, the Party example has one person going for certain?
2.
Either Jones or Kim will win the election.
versus
It is either feast or famine.
***I completely understand you do NOT want a double-not arrow because we do not know the ramifications of what they are being elected for and their COULD BE multiple people elected, like the school board the book mentions.
Compared to:
It is either feast or famine.
I want to:
Feast Famine
But, I think I'm wrong because it is not listed as an answer. David addresses that feast and famine are mutually exclusive. So you cannot have both. To me the original statement says that it must be either feast or famine and there is no room in between and my common sense says there can't be both.
My mind is blown. I felt really good about this entire chapter up until this one thing. I think my issue resides in the mutually exclusivity, but I am honestly not even sure anymore. I have reread this section and I am confusing myself even more.
Please do not feel it necessary to respond to each point of this post. If you may be able to explain it in a way I can apply it and figure this out myself, I think that would be really beneficial. But you guys know better than I do!
Thank you so much for any replies.