verb
- to turn outward or inside out
- in logic, to form the obverse of a proposition by negating both the subject and predicate
Usage: formal; logic and philosophy
Usage: technical; logic
Examples
- The philosopher obverts the original statement to test its logical equivalence.
- In formal logic, when you obvert a proposition, you create a new statement with inverted terms.
- The surgeon carefully obverts the tissue to examine the inner surface.
- To obvert the claim 'All dogs are animals,' we get 'No dogs are non-animals.'
- The argument obverts traditional assumptions about the nature of consciousness.