B implies A would be wishful thinking implies that you are correct. This is obviously false. You clearly intended to have a not in there somewhere. Double check your definitions.
I was giving an example of (~A && ~B). If you want an example of (A && B), it would be that I don't even look at my statements and just assume that I have tons of money because that would be awesome, but I also just happen to have lots of money.
B implies A would be wishful thinking implies that you are correct. This is obviously false.
It being a law of the Internet that corrections usually contain at least one error, that applies to my own corrections too. In this case the error is the definitions of A and B.
A=being correct, B=non-wishful-thinking.
"Having the sum be correct is a necessary condition for non-wishful thinking" means B implies A, which in turn is equivalent to (B || ~A).
"You can be wrong for reasons other than wishful thinking" means ~(~B implies ~A), which i...
Another month, another rationality quotes thread. The rules are: