Hey! So there was a thread started on LR questions. Creating a cheatsheet. Link here:
http://7sage.com/discussion/#/discussion/259/cheat-sheet-lr-question-types
I was wondering if anyone had a type of cheet sheet for LG??
Wondering if there exists a cheatsheet for biconditionals? I know there isn't that much to learn but it's helpful to have one to refer to when you're trying to cement those skills!
... mind the direction of the conditional arrows! Sometimes answers with reversed ... think "Correlations->Causation" and "Sufficient->Necessary(or the other ...
... conditional reasoning: mistaken negation/mistaken reversal (confusing necessary and sufficient ... for example: causal or conditional reasoning, then immediately look ... for causal or conditional reasoning in the answer ...
... knowledge of advanced conditional logic. Here is a little cheatsheet I created ... necessary splits and OR in sufficient splits. Why? Because in these ... the arrow. If AND in sufficient and OR in necessary, then ...
Here is a LR cheatsheet I created from my studies ... Reasoning - Sufficient Assumption & Supporting Principle (Argument based)**
*require conditional logic ... in contrapositive format of original conditional statement.
Read stimulus, mark ...
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> Here is a LR cheatsheet I created from my studies ... - Sufficient Assumption & Supporting Principle (Argument based)**
> *require conditional logic ... in contrapositive format of original conditional statement.
> Read stimulus ...
Hi everyone! Does anyone have a good study guide or cheatsheet tip(s) I could use when making my own? Or possibly an example of their own that I could use when making mine?
Memorize that logical indicator cheatsheet with all 4 groups. Print ... 're flipping the necessary and sufficient and maybe issues with negating ... logical indicators are necessary or sufficient you can then move on ...
reposting this I found from old thread, though you guys would find it helpful as well
FAMILY # 1 is the PROVE family where the stimulus is taken to be true but the answer choices are under suspect and you must prove one of them to be ...
I started the Trainer and I just got to the LG sections. How did you guys learned the notations to diagram the rules? Did you make a cheatsheet, or did you memorize them as you practice? thank you!
The example given on the cheatsheet states, No candy is bitter.
pick either idea and negate it right?
what about No candy? doesn't that mean candy is negated?
so instead of C arrow /B shouldn't it be /C arrow /B?
In the starter package - JY makes a lot of references to like words like But and Because introducing premises. Does anyone know which module/video talks about these key words? Is there a cheatsheet?