- Wed Jul 06, 2022 7:58 pm
#96055
My apologies, but I may have gotten to the point of answering my own question.
Necessary Condition Requirements: “only if” (other requirements not explicitly specified are possible) vs “the only” (other requirements that are not explicitly specified are not possible)
In this argument the author uses “only if” for the requirements for Accepted for Publication. The author does not preclude other requirements from either being possible or impossible for Accepted for Publication. If the author used “the only” for the requirements for Accepted for Publication, then we would have known that only the requirements specified by the author are the requirements for Accepted for Publication and nothing else is / could be a requirement.
“Only if” – other requirements that are not explicitly specified are possible, if not explicitly prohibited by the author elsewhere in the argument.
“The only” – only the requirements that are explicitly specified by the author are possible and all other requirements do not exist / not possible.
Necessary Condition Requirements: “only if” (other requirements not explicitly specified are possible) vs “the only” (other requirements that are not explicitly specified are not possible)
In this argument the author uses “only if” for the requirements for Accepted for Publication. The author does not preclude other requirements from either being possible or impossible for Accepted for Publication. If the author used “the only” for the requirements for Accepted for Publication, then we would have known that only the requirements specified by the author are the requirements for Accepted for Publication and nothing else is / could be a requirement.
“Only if” – other requirements that are not explicitly specified are possible, if not explicitly prohibited by the author elsewhere in the argument.
“The only” – only the requirements that are explicitly specified by the author are possible and all other requirements do not exist / not possible.