Subscription pricing
Hi guys,
Is the negation of "many" "none" or just "not many"? I think the negation is "none" because "many" implies "more than 1" and how many it exactly implies depends on different contexts. Did any lesson cover this?
Thanks in advance!
0
3 comments
Thanks for all of your advice!! :smiley:
Technically, both are correct (NONE and NOT MANY) ... just easier to use none :).
It might be helpful to just mentally replace 'many' with 'some' every time you see it. (Yes, in real life, many means 'more than one,' but in lsat-land, we can just think of it as 'some'; subjective and objective bias and all)
https://classic.7sage.com/lesson/many-implies-some/
The binary cut of some (1-100) is 0, none.
The negation of some is none. "not many" I think translates to the same idea because not many is not some and if it isn't some, that really just means none.
Ex: Many dogs are brave. This just means that some dogs are brave.
the contrapositive is No dogs are brave. = No is group four, negate, necessary...or: if you are brave you are not a dog.
D → ~B~
B → ~D~