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Conference thebay::joyoflex

Title:The Joy of Lex
Notice:A Notes File even your grammar could love
Moderator:THEBAY::SYSTEM
Created:Fri Feb 28 1986
Last Modified:Mon Jun 02 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1192
Total number of notes:42769

186.0. "double negatives aren't always positive" by SIERRA::OSMAN (and silos to fill before I feep, and silos to fill before I feep) Fri May 09 1986 18:38

    The other evening, my fiance Barbara, and I, were in her kitchen
    when she received a phone call from Sandy, a mutual friend.
    
    Sandy was a bit concerned that I hadn't called in a while, and
    that perhaps the reason was that I was mad at her.
    
    Barbara attempted to assure her that I wasn't mad, and that
    was not the reason (if any) that I hadn't called in a while.
    Barbara's first attempt came out like this:
    
    	"He didn't call you because he's mad at you"
    
    We looked at each other and laughed as we realized that she
    didn't mean that.  She tried again:
    
    	"He didn't not call you because he's mad at you".
    
    But if we collapse double negatives into a positive, this means:
    
    	"He called you because he's mad at you".
    
    which isn't what is meant !  So this is an example of double negation
    not equaling the positive !
    
    This can get worse.  For instance, if Sandy accused me of avoiding
    her instead of "not calling", Barbara might have said:
    
    	"He wasn't avoiding you because he's mad at you".
    
    That could be wrongly construed to mean
    
    	"He's mad at you, and therefore he's not avoiding you !"
    
    Or it could be wrongly construed to mean
    
    	"He wasn't avoiding you because he's mad at you.  It's
    	because of another reason that he's avoiding you !"
    
    Has anyone else ever found themself in a similar communication
    difficulty like this involving negatives?
    
    /Eric
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186.1Maybe you can check w/Evelyn Waugh & Joyce KilmerSTAR::TOPAZSun May 11 1986 13:4410
     re .0:
     
     > Has anyone else ever found themself in a similar communication
     > difficulty like this... 
     
     If you can somehow find a way to overcome the inherent social problems
     when you have a fiance named Barbara, I'm sure you'll find a solution
     to the multiple-negative problem. 
     
     --Mr Topaz
186.2Double negatives are a No-No!APTECH::RSTONEThu May 29 1986 16:521
    
186.3"not an unreasonably difficult task"SIERRA::OSMANand silos to fill before I feep, and silos to fill before I feepWed Jun 11 1986 11:1412
    Another example of misleading double negative.  Someone was suggesting
    in a technical report that such-and-such
    
    	". . . is NOT an UNreasonably difficult task"
    
    Are we to infer that it is therefore
    
    	". . . a REASONABLY DIFFICULT task ??"
    
    and hence should not be done ?
    
    /Eric
186.4Reasonable vs. UnreasonableAPTECH::RSTONEWed Jun 11 1986 13:447
    Re: .3
    
    If it is only _reasonably_ difficult, you could probably attempt
    it if you were _reasonably_ skillful or adept.  However, if it were
    _UNreasonably_ difficult, you had better leave it for an expert.
    
    Since it is NOT UNreasonably difficult, why not give it a try?
186.5re: .4EVER::MCVAYPete McVayWed Jun 11 1986 23:221
    Okay--let's not be unreasonable, then...
186.6Aren't we in total disagreement?TOPDOC::SLOANEThu Jun 12 1986 11:085
    Enough already, yet! 
    
    I couldn't fail to disagree with you less.
    
    -bs