- Fri Jan 30, 2015 6:07 pm
#18106
Diagramming:
understanding a word knowing dictionary definition understanding words in that definition
people slash knowing dictionary definitions of some of the words they utter
babies slash knowing dictionary definitions of some of the words they utter
So, as I said previously, answer A is tempting, but since
knowing dictionary definition understanding words in that definition
, "understanding words" is the necessary, not the sufficient. The necessary is often a larger set than the sufficient. (E.g., "Every fish is an animal", and "animal" is a larger set than "fish".) So one could understand words in a dictionary definition (the necessary), without knowing the dictionary definition (the sufficient), sort of as if you have a dream, and you understand the words in the dream, but you don't understand the whole dream. To understand the whole dream, you would have to understand all the words in it; but you could misunderstand the whole dream, while still understanding the words in it. The larger set "understand the words in the dream" includes the subsets "understands the whole dream" and "doesn't understand the whole dream". Whew!
So, a baby, even if he/she doesn't know a dictionary definition, could somehow understand the words in the definition. (That may sound stupid, but I'm just following the diagramming. Maybe the "understanding" is on some emotional, non-logical level, maybe?)
So, we don't know babies utter individual words they don't understand. But answer E makes sense, because even if some babies understand, we know from the stimulus that none of them knows every single dictionary definition of every word he/she utters.
And no, as for "Should I be looking for an answer choice that contains a conditional statement anytime there is a must be true stimulus with conditionality?", not necessarily. If the stimulus says, "If I am happy, I eat ice cream. I am happy.", then "I eat ice cream" could be the correct answer, even though it is not a conditional statement.
Hope this helps,
David
SMR wrote:Hi David,Hello SMR,
I'm still a little confused. I can understand why (E) is correct but I don't understand why (A) also couldn't be correct because it seems as if (A) could be an inference based off of the stimulus? The only reason I could think of for why (A) is incorrect is because the statement is too strong for the conditional nature of the stimulus and it does not contain conditionality correct? Should I be looking for an answer choice that contains a conditional statement anytime there is a must be true stimulus with conditionality?
Also, could you please diagram the entire conditional stimulus for me thoroughly without abbreviations. I really appreciate it!
Thanks!
Diagramming:
understanding a word knowing dictionary definition understanding words in that definition
people slash knowing dictionary definitions of some of the words they utter
babies slash knowing dictionary definitions of some of the words they utter
So, as I said previously, answer A is tempting, but since
knowing dictionary definition understanding words in that definition
, "understanding words" is the necessary, not the sufficient. The necessary is often a larger set than the sufficient. (E.g., "Every fish is an animal", and "animal" is a larger set than "fish".) So one could understand words in a dictionary definition (the necessary), without knowing the dictionary definition (the sufficient), sort of as if you have a dream, and you understand the words in the dream, but you don't understand the whole dream. To understand the whole dream, you would have to understand all the words in it; but you could misunderstand the whole dream, while still understanding the words in it. The larger set "understand the words in the dream" includes the subsets "understands the whole dream" and "doesn't understand the whole dream". Whew!
So, a baby, even if he/she doesn't know a dictionary definition, could somehow understand the words in the definition. (That may sound stupid, but I'm just following the diagramming. Maybe the "understanding" is on some emotional, non-logical level, maybe?)
So, we don't know babies utter individual words they don't understand. But answer E makes sense, because even if some babies understand, we know from the stimulus that none of them knows every single dictionary definition of every word he/she utters.
And no, as for "Should I be looking for an answer choice that contains a conditional statement anytime there is a must be true stimulus with conditionality?", not necessarily. If the stimulus says, "If I am happy, I eat ice cream. I am happy.", then "I eat ice cream" could be the correct answer, even though it is not a conditional statement.
Hope this helps,
David