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- Find a counterexample to show that the conjecture is false The sum of a positive number and a negative number is always positive.

- Find a counterexample to show that the conjecture is false The sum of a positive-example-1
User Josh Pinto
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1 Answer

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The sum of a positive number and a negative number is always positive.

So:

Let:

a = arbitrary number where a>0

b = another arbitrary number where b<0

According to the conjecture:

a + b > 0

However, this isn't true because:

For example:

a = 2 ; 2>0

b = -8 ; -8 < 0

2 + (-8) > 0

2 - 8 > 0

-6 > 0 ------> This is false, therefore the conjecture is false

User StefanTo
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