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contrapositive
[ kon-truh-poz-i-tiv ]
noun
- a contrapositive statement of a proposition.
contrapositive
/ ËŒ°ìÉ’²Ô³Ù°ùəˈ±èÉ’³úɪ³Ùɪ±¹ /
adjective
- placed opposite or against
noun
- logic
- a conditional statement derived from another by negating and interchanging antecedent and consequent
- a categorial proposition obtained from another, esp validly, by any of a number of operations including negation, transferring the terms, changing their quality, and also possibly weakening from universal to particular
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of contrapositive1
Example Sentences
In the case of the I proposition the contrapositive is impossible, as infringing the main rule of conversion.
Every positive in thought has a contrapositive, and the positive and contrapositive are of the same kind.
But take the obverse of the contrapositive of both premises: All m is p; All m is s: ∴ Some s is p.
We will show in this manner that the above is really the contrapositive of the 0 proposition.
Every impression felt is felt as a change or transition from something else: but it is a variation of the same impression—the something else, the contrapositive, is not entirely different.
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