- Posts: 4
- Joined: Dec 19, 2020
- Fri Jan 08, 2021 4:52 pm
#83063
Hello, I've read the explanations in this thread that premise 3 (sentence 3, with the word "consistent" cannot be diagrammed as a conditional statement) and I did arrive at the correct answer D by taking the contra positive of P1:
RS and CS --> bad econ
contrapositive: bad econ (aka healthy econ - referring to P3) --> RS or CS
However, I have two questions that remain:
1) If P3 were diagrammable, would it be logical with the entire argument or would it not be?
"Of course, had either one or the other phenomenon failed to occur, this would be consistent with the economy as a whole being healthy."
RS --> good econ . . . contrapositive: good econ (so bad econ) -->RS ... so wouldn't this be a mistaken negation of the P1's contrapositive, which is: bad econ -->S]RS[/S] ?
CS --> good econ . . . contrapositive: good econ (so bad econ) --> CS... wouldn't this also be a MN of P1's contrapositive, which is: bad econ -->CS ?
2) In general then, is it ever possible for a stimulus to present two or more conditional statements that do not match in logic? (From my diagram above (assuming it is correct), it seems that P3 would NOT be a logical part of the argument)
If it is possible, then would you simply take the statements that do match in logic (and their contrapositives) and the ones that do lead to the conclusion and ignore the ones that don't?
Thank you in advance!
Tiffany
RS and CS --> bad econ
contrapositive: bad econ (aka healthy econ - referring to P3) --> RS or CS
However, I have two questions that remain:
1) If P3 were diagrammable, would it be logical with the entire argument or would it not be?
"Of course, had either one or the other phenomenon failed to occur, this would be consistent with the economy as a whole being healthy."
RS --> good econ . . . contrapositive: good econ (so bad econ) -->RS ... so wouldn't this be a mistaken negation of the P1's contrapositive, which is: bad econ -->S]RS[/S] ?
CS --> good econ . . . contrapositive: good econ (so bad econ) --> CS... wouldn't this also be a MN of P1's contrapositive, which is: bad econ -->CS ?
2) In general then, is it ever possible for a stimulus to present two or more conditional statements that do not match in logic? (From my diagram above (assuming it is correct), it seems that P3 would NOT be a logical part of the argument)
If it is possible, then would you simply take the statements that do match in logic (and their contrapositives) and the ones that do lead to the conclusion and ignore the ones that don't?
Thank you in advance!
Tiffany