When a passage says "usually," is this a version of "most"? For example, "John usually goes to the store." Is this essentially saying that "Most of the time, John goes to the store"? I'm confused about how one approaches this as a conditional.
I have some question on In/out games regarding chaining, probably will take 15-30 minutes to explain to me, I just don't get it from JY, willing to pay for someones time via zoom. Thank you.
... answer choices which has no conditional indicator or universal quantifier? conditional indicator or universal quantifier. conditional statements. So, perhaps, their principles ...
I know for most logic games we should chain conditionals, but JY did not chain conditionals together on the CD game. Does this mean that there are times when we should not chain conditionals? Thanks.
In the lesson on bi-conditionals (Lesson 7 of 18 in Advanced Logic), we are told that "Alan attends the meeting only if Chris attends the meeting" is expressed as "A>C." I get that. But don't we need another expression that says in effect, "otherwise [ ...
It seems that one's chances are lower as a non-citizen international student. Part of this might be because law schools worry that non-citizens need sponsorship to work after graduation. Does anyone have experience applying as a lawful permanent resident/ ...
J.Y. Ping said:
(1) All bananas are made of atoms. [B–>A]
(2) All non-bananas are made of atoms. [/B–>A]
(1) and (2) are consistent with each other.
The contradiction (must be false statement) to (1) would be some bananas ...