... confusing in the back pain question was the use of "sufficient" and "necessary ... are not necessary for pain but may be sufficient? I thought ... trying to call bulging disks sufficient for back pain, which ... . If bulging disk were sufficient for pain, these folks ...
... confusing in the back pain question was the use of "sufficient" and "necessary ... are not necessary for pain but may be sufficient? I thought ... trying to call bulging disks sufficient for back pain, which ... . If bulging disk were sufficient for pain, these folks ...
... the phrasing isn't as confusing, the conditional relationship becomes a ... phrasing made me confuse the necessary and sufficient conditions, and I wrongly ...
... necessary assumption.
>
> I think the confusing ... some assumption questions "Sufficient Assumption" and others "Necessary Assumption". ... />
So 'Necessary Assumption' is actually redundant and 'sufficient assumption' is really ...
... a necessary assumption.
>
> I think the confusing issue ... calling some assumption questions "Sufficient Assumption" and others "Necessary Assumption".
> ... is sufficient to guarantee the conclusion. But it's not a necessary ...
... can be necessary for the argument to be valid, sufficient for ... /students might call a "sufficient assumption" that are actually ... re applied. An assumption--sufficient or necessary--does not mean something ... ; it may be more confusing not to call something SA ...
... exactly right. Without the sufficient, there is no necessary.
I ... is; it may be more confusing not to call something SA ... , these are all necessary assumptions given the sufficient assumption that the answer ...
... address something that might be confusing: How is it that we ... what appears to be a confusing problem. In fact, with reasonable ... be a sufficient condition? We were told it was necessary! I don ...
... Mistaken Reversal: mistakes being sufficient to achieve a particular outcome ... assertion that something is necessary to a given goal ... that the thing is sufficient for its achievement”
b. Correlation ≠ Causation: “confusing the coincidence of two events ...
... .
For instance, a necessary assumption might have a distribution ... ) is the correct answer, a necessary assumption...
T (2) ... ,
C is a sufficient assumption answer choice (and so ... other words is not a necessary assumption.), and...
F ...
Okay, so I havent seen this in a problem and if I have I cant remember. But how would someone diagram this: If necessary, they need to register for the race, mainly the if necessary is what throws me off.
All the different companies use different phrases for question types and I'm getting a bit confused by the different terms. Can someone explain what pseudo sufficient questions mean?