by Misti Duvall Tue Jan 26, 2021 5:53 pm
Yeah, that is one tricky rule! When used as it's used in PT55, G4, otherwise does indicate a biconditional. The key is that it's giving a second piece of information, which is what biconditionals always do (give two pieces of information). Off the top of my head, I can't think of an LG rule that would use otherwise in another way.
The bottom line: if you've got two conditional rules that are reversals or negations of each other, it's a biconditional. Sometimes these are written as two separate rules and sometimes they're written in the same rule.
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