don't know how to verify one way or the other — DavidJohnson
Some mugs(Ayes) are copper(Bees).Why not A? — Tobias
Nope. Can't drink mead from a penny.[Pennies] and [Copper] are equivalent at least in their aspect of all [Pennies] being [copper]. If all [pennies] are [Copper] and if some [mugs] are [copper] as well than some [mugs] must also be [pennies] since they are equivalent to [copper]. — Tobias
It depends on the Ayes Bees and Seas being defined as substances or properties, right. — Tobias
Some Ayes are Bees
All Seas are Bees — DavidJohnson
do it in my head — DavidJohnson
D looks tempting, but depends on the implicit added proposition that if some As are Bs, then some As are not Bs — tim wood
If the proposition, "No Ayes are Seas" were added, would D still be valid? — DavidJohnson
1. Some Ayes are Seas (true, but a premise)
2. Some Ayes are not Seas (undecidable)
3. All Ayes are Seas (undecidable)
4. No Ayes are Seas (false) — Agent Smith
Some Ayes are Bees
All Seas are Bees — DavidJohnson
Some Ayes are Bees
All Seas are Bees — DavidJohnson
as a non-logistician I'm waiting to see where this goes. — DavidJohnson
the middle term is not distributed, which means no valid conclusion can be drawn. — tim wood
This follows iff there is an A that is not a B. — tim wood
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