In regards to PT31 Game 2 question 8, if the rule states /A and/B —-> C, then the contrapositive would be /C —-> A or B. My question is, can both A and B be in (I.e. at least one is in) or is it just either A or B, not both. Thank you!
quick question, is it correct to say, when there are only two options (like an in-out game), to translate "a and b cannot be on the same day (or whatever it may be)", then you use bi-conditionals. But if there are more than 2 game boards or possibilities, ...
From a logic perspective (see below) I can't work out any meaningful differences, but I noticed that JY splits these off in his map of bi-conditional statements. Am I missing something?
I am learning about negation but when it comes to the quiz its confusing because the only terms I learned through CC was "some" and "all" to learn how to negate. How do you negate terms besides these such as "if...then" situations?
... 13th, 6 pm EST**
**Conditional Logic Intensive**
In this ... to tackle questions that are conditional logic heavy. We will be ... using conditional heavy question types like Must ...
... . Its specific type is a conditional MBF. I know going into ... "depends" - which hints at necessary conditional. But then I tried to ... a context or a non-conditional statement.
So some of my top missed categories on PTs have been NA/SA/PMR, not because I think they are particularly difficult but sometimes I'm just missing the argument at hand or not properly seeing how the arguments are drawn in my head. A lot of the time when I ...
... anything else for LG and conditional reasoning except 7sage. It is ... />
4- **LEARN ARGUMENTATION AND CONDITIONAL REASONING.** I cannot stress this ...
... I could connect up the Conditional in the Premises to the ... is just explaining with the conditional (Proper Alignment ----> Muscles Opposite ... Sides Pull Equally) why the conditional in the Sub Conclusion is ...