`Just in case' does not mean `if and only if'.  You bring along an umbrella just in case it rains; two sets are of the same cardinality just in the case that there is a bijection between them.  What a difference a definite article makes!  
Where did I pick up the habit of using `just in case' when I really meant `just in the case that'?  Possibly from one Andrew M. Bailey.  Except that I was doing it two years ago, quite a while before I met AB.  More likely this nasty little meme has been circulating throughout the Anglophone philosophical community for quite some time, and both AB and I contracted it that way.
March 30, 2007
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2 comments:
I bring an umbrella if and only if it rains. What I like better is, "My car has an air bag just in case I get in an accident." Ah! My car does have an air bag! (I owe that to Tom Crisp)
If you follow the first link, the linguistic claims that `just in case' is an almost strictly American idiom. So confusion is only unlikely when speaking to American philosophers.
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