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Negative implication

264 bytes added, 17:50, April 14, 2018
because uncertainty about "A" requires the existence of "Not A."
'''Negative implication''' is an underdeveloped concept of logic that the existence of +1, for example, implies the existence of -1. The existence of [[evil]] implies the existence of good, as an other example. The existence of the seen (the [[material]]) implies the existence of the unseen. And so on.
 
Negative implication is required by the fundamental [[uncertainty]] discovered in [[quantum mechanics]] and described in the [[Book of Genesis]],<ref>See [[Biblical Scientific Foreknowledge]]</ref> because uncertainty about "A" requires the existence of "Not A."
Mathematicians did not widely accept the validity of negative numbers until the 1800s.<ref>http://www.answers.com/Q/In_what_century_were_negative_numbers_finally_accepted</ref>
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