Violet B. asked 09/04/24 Did Jenni write the converse statement properly? Determine if it's true or false, then give a counterexample if it's false.
Did Jenni write the converse statement properly? Determine if ... - Wyzant
What is the contrapositive, converse and inverse of the below statements? I am a little confused by these concepts and would like a bit of help pls. I am doing a uni degree with discreet maths as m...
The correct converse should say, "If I got a royal flush, then I cashed in my chips." Is this correct? Is there a simple test I can run the converse against to verify that it's the correct converse of a statement?
5 Can we prove an ‘if’ statement by proving that its converse is false? Proving an implication by disproving its converse is legitimate only if said implication is not quantified.
I know that 𝑞 → 𝑝 is the converse of 𝑝 → 𝑞. ¬𝑞→ ¬ 𝑝 is the contrapositive of 𝑝 → 𝑞 ¬ 𝑝→ ¬ 𝑞 is the inverse of 𝑝 → 𝑞 However, I'm not sure if it's the same for bidirectional statements. Am I right in the following statements? Original statement: We’ll win the ICG cup only if we have enough players. Converse: Only if we have enough players ...
I'm well-aware of the relationship between a statement and its contrapositive, inverse, and converse. My question is something different. When two conditional statements are logically equivalent, is the converse of one statement logically equivalent to the converse of the other statement?
Not quite. First, you have to determine whether the converse statement is written correctly (regardless of its validity). The converse is formed by switching the hypothesis and conclusion. So, in this case, the converse is written correctly. So, that leaves either 2 or 4 as your correct answer. You are correct to eliminate 4 because we are trying to dispute the validity of the example. That ...