4 comments

  • Wednesday, Aug 31 2016

    @nye887085

    Hey! What's up?

    0
  • Wednesday, Aug 31 2016

    I don't know why but this explanation reminds me of the video of that little boy at the carnival but replace probably with apparently. Hi @nye887085

    1
  • Wednesday, Aug 31 2016

    Accounts playable da GOAT

    1
  • Wednesday, Aug 31 2016

    In short no, you can't do this. But you have to be careful what your elements are.

    Say you have the argument you gave:

    Probably Not A--->Probably Not B

    Probably B--->Probably A is not a contrapositive because it doesn't mean the same thing as the original statement; a contrapositive provides no new information--only a restatement using a different combination of words.

    Think of this practical example:

    If I probably (or, most likely) didn't attend class, I probably didn't get an A. That isn't the same thing as if I probably got an A, I probably attended class. This this is the case because you're conflating inductive arguments (arguments of probability) and deductive arguments.

    To see this further, let's use the same argument:

    Probably Not A--->Probably Not B

    There is a contrapositive for this:

    Not probably not B--->Not Probably not A.

    1

Confirm action

Are you sure?