Demodulation through many resources found online says that the incoming signal is multiplied by the carrier wave and then passed through a low pass filter that removes the carrier wave from the modulated signal. I understand this.
However, we know that the incoming signal is already multiplied by the carrier wave therefore, shouldn't passing the incoming signal through a low pass filter remove the carrier wave anyway?
For example.
The former states : Modulated Signal * Carrier wave = incoming signal
Incoming signal * (Wave of same frequency and phase) ---> low pass filter = modulated signal
The latter states(my question): Modulated Signal * Carrier wave = incoming signal
Incoming signal ---> low pass filter (removes the carrier wave)= modulated signal
I would like to know why the former is stated rather than the latter and the benefits of it. I suppose the incoming signal can include noise that could somewhat alter the signal therefore multiplying by a wave of same frequency can help, but I'm not too sure about this.