Cases of the incorrect application of the contrary, subcontrary and subalternation relations (these hold in the traditional
square of opposition, not the modern square of opposition) are syllogistic fallacies called
illicit contrary,
illicit subcontrary, and
illicit subalternation, respectively. Cases of incorrect application of the contradictory relation (this relation holds in both the traditional and modern squares of opposition) are so infrequent, that an "illicit contradictory" fallacy is usually not recognized. The below shows examples of these cases.
Illicit contrary • It is false that all
A are
B, therefore no
A are
B. • It is false that no
A are
B, therefore all
A are
B.
Illicit subcontrary • Some
A are
B, therefore it is false that some
A are not
B. • Some
A are not
B, therefore some
A are
B.
Illicit subalternation and illicit superalternation • Some
A are not
B, therefore no
A are
B. • It is false that all
A are
B, therefore it is false that some
A are
B. == See also ==