... qualify as an "**or, but notboth**" rule? In that case, ... or K are selected, but notboth are selected" translates into ** ... ) cannot represent "**either or, but notboth**".
In **J ... or K are selected, but notboth are selected".
@bruhhhhhh Hey you're totally right! I was overlooking the "or but notboth", so you're definitely correct in stating that world 1 is not possible. Thank you :)
... function AND aesthetics)
IF (not flawed) --> (discusses function and ... the 'either A or B'/notboth whereas the book is either ... conclusion fails: the book is not flawed (the book DIDN'T ...
Yes, having BOTH is a possibility. I look ... there's a 'not' (/) at the end then NOTBOTH is possible [A ... a 'positive' (not a not ;p) at the end, then BOTH is possible ...
One other question that just popped into my head was which words trigger the biconditionals? Is it always anything that contains "notboth," "except," "not otherwise," and "if and only if?" I cannot think of any others that have popped up.
In an in/out game you could have both out, but notboth in. But since this is two different committees, and not simply a question of being on the committee or off the committee, they need to be in separate groups.
Ehh... Honestly, I just wouldn't do it. Just learn the rules in advance and don't worry about reading them on test day. Seriously, you should reserve every single ounce of mental energy on the actual test, not its rules.
Thank you!! I think I just needed to hear that to not feel guilty of only doing one and notboth haha! But interesting, I do really enjoy the feedback and data like the PT tracking etc, might subscribe anyway to use that!
c: NOT (Addiction -> Dependence & Abuse)< ... prove C (that it's not the case that addiction leads ... 's addiction and NOT Dependence or NOT Abuse or NOTboth
... sides.
"If C does not occur" is simple to diagram ... "then A and B cannot both occur" is by itself a ... statement to read as, "If not C, then (this relationship between ... just happens to be a not-both.
... is, A and B are both out in the world of ... "/C universe" because of the not-both logic.
1. A --> ... )
3. A and B both out *(which is what your ... three worlds inherent in the not-both relationship. If you only wrote ...
...
2nd- Alicia " knows". Knowledge does not equal fact. Again what if ... like this:
- Not flawed- It is very common ... two answer choices that are not in fact flawed. They ... feature one of the flaws, notboth. Since sufficient/necessity confusion ...
... 2nd- Alicia " knows". Knowledge does not equal fact. Again what if ... :
>
> - Not flawed- It is very common ... two answer choices that are not in fact flawed. They ... feature one of the flaws, notboth. Since sufficient/necessity confusion is ...
Notboth: J or M serve on ... the panel but notboth J ----> /M (one is ... apart: J and M do not serve on same panel together ... (the two can never be both in nor both out)
I am not exactly sure what you mean ... room(NR) THEN I would not be able to see(S ... identical to that of a "notboth" rule in logic games. What ... that means is both things cannot happen at the ... can infer that he was not seen based off the conditional ...
Example: Alan or ... goes to the park, but notboth.
/A C
< ... br />
Alan and Chris "cannot both" go to the park. not both" is combined as the biconditional ...
Sure! "Not" is group 4 logical indicator-- ... it the _necessary condition_. So both of the ways to negate ... of each other. You would NOT be able to stick the ... . This is the "or but notboth" negation (see the CC for ...