Howdy, Stranger!

It looks like you're new here. If you want to get involved, click one of these buttons!

Inclusive or exclusive 'or'

Michelle H.Michelle H. Alum Member

How do we tell the difference between an inclusive 'or' (group 3 rules) or an exclusive 'or' (can be negated to mean 'and')?

Comments

  • NotMyNameNotMyName Alum Member Sage
    5320 karma

    It will generally come from the context and depend on your translating the true meaning of a given statement. Unfortunately, I'm not aware of any universal rule here.

    "I can marry Susan or Beatrice tomorrow". With the reasonable assumption that I am not a polygamist, this is an exclusive OR.

    "To score a 180 on the LSAT, you must either study very hard or be very lucky". Can a lucky person who studies very hard score a 180 on the LSAT? Sure. That makes this an inclusive OR.

    Does that help?

  • akistotleakistotle Member 🍌🍌
    9377 karma

    In the real world, if you are asked "what would you like for dessert, ice cream or cake?" I think it means you have to pick one of them, not both. (Well, you can try saying "BOTH!!" and the person who asked you would be like "okay...:neutral: ")

    In the LSAT world, I think the default reading is inclusive (unless it is explicitly stated that it's "not both"). If it says "I'm going to meet A or B", this means "I'm going to meet A or B or both" unless specifically told "but not both." I saw once in Logic Games that says "or both." (A or B or both). But this "or both" is redundant.

    But there are times that you have to interpret as exclusive. PT21.S2.Q20 (https://7sage.com/lsat_explanations/lsat-21-section-2-question-20/) says:

    A will either take a leave from her company or else she quits

    /L --> Q
    /Q -->L

    But can she do both? I don't think she can take a leave once she quits: Q --> /L; therefore it's Q <-->/L

  • JustDoItJustDoIt Alum Member
    3112 karma

    @akistotle said:
    In the LSAT world, I think the default reading is inclusive (unless it is explicitly stated that it's "not both").

    I agree with this. I think that inclusive is the way to go, but like @jkatz1488 mentioned, it really depends on the context.

Sign In or Register to comment.