NO NO NO You confuse concrete design principles with the L/S span resistance capacity of homogenous materials.
Whether a concrete slab is "one or two way" depends on the direction(s) that the reinforcement runs in. It is a one way slab when the slab has tension reinforcement spanning between two supports. A slab is "two way" when tension steel runs in two directions. The supports can be 2, on opposite sides, or 4, one support at each edge, however it is the tension steel running both ways that makes a concrete slab 2 way. A concrete slab with tension steel in one direction only, can be supported on all sides, but still only be one-way, because it has no capacity to resist bending moment perpendicular to the direction of reinforcement.
If the material is homogenous in each direction, YES, then whether it behaves as one way, or two, way depends on L/S and location of supports, but that is not true for concrete with tension steel spanning only between 2 opposing supports. Concrete is not homogenous in both directions when the reinforcement is only in one direction.
Independent events are seldomly independent.