Hi all,
I'm struggling a little with understanding how some of the conditional indicators (if, when, etc.) imply the exclusion of other conditions.
For example, the below makes sense to me:
If you are in New York, then you are in the United States.
Maybe because the content is familiar? Of course not being in the United States means you're not in New York, so /USA -> /NY
But, in the following example question:
A teacher earns respect if she fosters a love of learning.
Must we assume that if means if and only if, in this case meaning the only way she can earn respect is by fostering a love of learning? Couldn't she be a Nobel Prize winner that does not foster a love of learning, but is still respected?
"you're likely to get hard questions wrong anyways" - bro. what kind of motivation is that