Conversion (logic)
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In traditional logic conversion is a form of immediate inference in which from a given categorical proposition another proposition is inferred which has as its subject the predicate of the original proposition, and has as its predicate the subject of the original proposition, with the quality of the proposition remaining unchanged. The immediately inferred proposition is termed the converse of the original proposition.
The process of conversion results in an equivalent proposition only in type "E" and type "I" propositions. In the "E" type proposition both the subject term and the predicate term remain distributed in conversion, and in the "I" type proposition both the subject term and the predicate term remain undistributed in conversion.
For example, in the "E" type proposition No S is P conversion yields No P is S. Both of the terms remain distributed, that is, their class membership is exhausted. It can be expressed grammatically in the statements:
- No Romans are philosophers and No philosophers are Romans.
- Some Greeks are philosophers and Some philosophers are Greek.
All popes are saints and All saints are popes. In an "A" type proposition the subject term is distributed (exhausted) and the predicate undistributed. Conversion distributes the predicate of the original proposition as the subject in the inferred proposition. Contrast this with two other converted propositions:
- (1) All isosceles triangles have their base angles equal, and All triangles with their base angles equal are isosceles.
- (2) All equilateral triangles have three equal angles and All triangles with three equal angles are equilateral.
Conversion of the "O" type proposition Some S is not P is not possible, in every instance violating the rules of distribution.
The schema of conversion is:
| Original Proposition | Converse | |
|---|---|---|
| (A) All S is P | → | (I) Some P is S |
| (E) No S is P | ↔ | (E) No P is S |
| (I) Some S is P | ↔ | (I) Some P is S |
| (O) Some S is not P | None |
See also
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