Hi 7Sagers,

How would the following statement be diagrammed?

"The tornadoes in the area are not the only natural disasters happening in the country."

Does this statement have a useful representation using conditional logic? How would "not the only" be represented when diagramming a conditional statement? This was not pulled from a PrepTest, just something I thought of while going through the Logic section of the CC.

Thanks!

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5 comments

  • Wednesday, Jun 14 2023

    @dzxu88233 said:

    Would the translation be BOTH "Some natural disasters happening in the country (DHC) are the tornadoes in the area (TA)" as well as "Some natural disasters happening in the country (DHC) are not the tornadoes in the area (TA)"?

    When I read the statement, I think, "Oh, so tornadoes are included in the natural disasters happening in the country, but other natural disasters are also happening."

    Both DHC (-s-) TA, DHC (-s-) /TA sound correct to me.

    I really do think that, "Some natural disasters happening in the country (DHC) are the tornadoes in the area (TA)" is the proper translation because there is strictly speaking only one 'not' in your original sentence, i.e., the one that negates the group 1 indicator 'the only'. However, I can totally grant that the sentence, "Some natural disasters happening in the country (DHC) are not the tornadoes in the area (/TA)," is implied by this translation. Open to hearing others' thoughts on this!

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  • Wednesday, Jun 14 2023

    Would the translation be BOTH "Some natural disasters happening in the country (DHC) are the tornadoes in the area (TA)" as well as "Some natural disasters happening in the country (DHC) are not the tornadoes in the area (TA)"?

    When I read the statement, I think, "Oh, so tornadoes are included in the natural disasters happening in the country, but other natural disasters are also happening."

    Both DHC (-s-) TA, DHC (-s-) /TA sound correct to me.

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  • Wednesday, Jun 14 2023

    @jhemquintana624902 said:

    "The only" is a sufficient condition indicator, like "all," "any," "every," etc. When I see "not the only," I translate it to: "not all." "Not all" is just the negation of an all statement.

    "Not all" translates to, "some...not."

    "The tornados in the area are not the only natural disasters happening in the country."

    So, "Some natural disasters happening in the country (DHC) are not the tornadoes in the area (TA)."

    DHC (- s -) /TA

    So, when you negate a group 1 indicator like "the only" or "all", it turns into "some". That's why the proper translation would be, "Some natural disasters happening in the country (DHC) are the tornadoes in the area (TA)," which can be diagrammed as DHC (-s-) TA.

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  • Wednesday, Jun 14 2023

    "The only" is a sufficient condition indicator, like "all," "any," "every," etc. When I see "not the only," I translate it to: "not all." "Not all" is just the negation of an all statement.

    "Not all" translates to, "some...not."

    "The tornados in the area are not the only natural disasters happening in the country."

    So, "Some natural disasters happening in the country (DHC) are not the tornadoes in the area (TA)."

    DHC (- s -) /TA

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  • Wednesday, Jun 14 2023

    I don’t think this sentence needs to be translated. But if you wanted to translate, it would be, “Some natural disasters happening in the country are the tornadoes in the area.” As you can see, the meaning of the sentence isn’t improved by translating (at least not in my view).

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