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My hunch tells me that this is supposed to be B-->A.
However, my buddy tells me that this is A-->B, which also sounds right.
I have another buddy who tells me that this is A<-->B because
(1) A accompanies B is B-->A
(2) Always is a sufficiency indicator, which means A-->B; ergo, A<-->B
In case you guys are wondering, this is PT51 Section 3 Number 20 Choice (A). This has nothing to do with the answer, but I still want to know
Could you guys help me with this?
Comments
The lawgical implication stems from, "necessarily accompanies." This is the only indicator phrase in the whole sentence so that's where your focus should lie. Next, determine which variable that phrase is modifying. I.e., which of the two variables is that phrase talking about; A or B?
Once you determine which variable that phrase is talking about, next decide what it means to necessarily accompany something else? I.e. are you on the left side of the conditional arrow (sufficient) or the right side of the arrow (necessary). I think only one of these is obvious...
You should now have a good idea of which one of the above interpretations is right. If I were you, I'd lean heavily towards your hunch.
Clouds necessarily accompany rain.
Rain -----> Clouds
I think negating the statement helps intuitively understand it more:
Clouds do not necessarily accompany rain (sometimes there is rain with no clouds).
Rain <---s---> notClouds
Rain <---s---> notClouds is logically equivalent to, not(Rain -----> Clouds). Both of these could be wrong. But the fact they both result in the same statement, when negated, leads me to think your hunch seems correct.
"A necessarily accompanies B"
If I am B, what do you know about me fundamentally? I am accompanied by A. A depends on me, it can't help it. A is required to accompany me: so if B, then A (B-->A)
If I am A, what do you know about me fundamentally? Nothing. I could accompany B, but I could also accompany C, or other good looking letters like Z. In other words, A (the necessary condition) is inactive when considered by itself.
It took awhile for me to parse this out -- thanks so much for this brain teaser!