- Mon Jun 17, 2019 10:30 am
#65644
So I'm able to diagram these kinds of questions relatively well, what gets me into trouble and/or causes me to use way too much time is being able to see the missing link.
I'm still relatively new to this so hopefully more practice will help, but I'm also wondering if there is a more general, almost algebraic, way of doing these types of questions?
Just using this question as an example - I'm looking at my diagram and saying, "Okay, I've got 'As Intelligent' common to both premises and conclusion as a necessary condition, so one possibility is that I need to link X and another possibility is that I need to link Y to get to my conclusion, etc."
I understand that part of what makes these questions hard is that there aren't hard and fast rules that say okay since I have X then Y will ALWAYS be true, but I'm just asking for a general approach/questions I can ask myself to hopefully make these kinds of conditional problems more clear/easier to "see."
Thank you
I'm still relatively new to this so hopefully more practice will help, but I'm also wondering if there is a more general, almost algebraic, way of doing these types of questions?
Just using this question as an example - I'm looking at my diagram and saying, "Okay, I've got 'As Intelligent' common to both premises and conclusion as a necessary condition, so one possibility is that I need to link X and another possibility is that I need to link Y to get to my conclusion, etc."
I understand that part of what makes these questions hard is that there aren't hard and fast rules that say okay since I have X then Y will ALWAYS be true, but I'm just asking for a general approach/questions I can ask myself to hopefully make these kinds of conditional problems more clear/easier to "see."
Thank you