When you see "without", "until", "except" or "unless" what follows becomes the necessary condition and then you negate the remaining term and it becomes the sufficient.
Thus... GAIS ----> L
... negate a conditional you simply show that you can have the sufficient ... without the necessary ever occurring. if you ... A --> B, then to negate you say A and ~B ...
... sentence after those words the necessary condition. So, regardless of how ... know to negate the first part, make it the sufficient condition, keep ... is, and make it the necessary condition.
... sufficient in the NA question? You can’t have a necessary ... to a sufficient. So what is the sufficient which is ... trigger the contrapositive and must negate the sufficient.
> ... would be consistent with and sufficient for that argument, but ...
... ) we are expected to negate either the necessary or sufficient statement. I usually ... go with the sufficient statement, but ... sense to go with the necessary (as I think I have ...
... case of a sufficient being failed, must the necessary be false ... ). The sufficient condition is it raining and the necessary condition is ... not raining, we'd negate the sufficient. So we know it ... case of a necessary being true then the sufficient **must** also ...
... free where the political virtues necessary for remaining truly free have ... take either element, negate it and make it the sufficient condition.) On ...
... term and negate it and turn it into the sufficient one (for ... unless) and pick the other key term negate ... it and put it in the necessary position respectively ...
... .
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?