Thks NN for the explanations.
My summary from this question:
1. A unless B: A ->B (after UNLESS is a necessary condition)
2. To / in order to represents the if-part in if-then statements.
-- by 会员 AlohaDJ (2011/8/10 1:37:05)
Thks NN for the explanations.
My summary from this question:
1. A unless B: A ->B (after UNLESS is a necessary condition)
2. To / in order to represents the if-part in if-then statements.
-- by 会员 AlohaDJ (2011/8/10 1:37:05)
A unless B: Not A --> B (You have to negate the claim in A to make it a sufficient condition).
Not A unless B: A --> B
-- by 会员 sdcar2010 (2011/8/10 2:35:13)
Fierce competition --> m&m moment
m&m moment --> diehard fans
If you acknowledge the above premises, then their contrapositives are correct:
No diehard fans --> No m&m moment
No m&m moment --> No fierce competition
Therefore, No diehard fans --> No fierce competition
For formal logic questions in CR, do not add your own objective/subjective opinions to the logic chains in the passage. Remember, we are analyzing the author's logic reasonings here, not yours. ONLY focus on the logic statements in the passage and go from there.
-- by 会员 sdcar2010 (2011/8/9 22:04:06)
sdcar, I have a question about the trigger. Is it something that appears in the stimulus? I saw you say sufficient conditon, so I think the trigger must appear as it does in the stimulus, am I right?
-- by 会员 corrine90 (2011/8/20 9:52:35)