- Fri Sep 16, 2011 6:13 pm
#1876
Hi guys,
I need some help with this:
Political theorist: The chief foundations of all governments are the legal system and the police force; and as there cannot be a good legal system where the police are not well paid, it follows that where the police are well paid there will be a good legal system.
The reasoning in the argument is not sound because it fails to establish that...
I understand why D is the correct answer (a well-paid police fore is sufficient to guarantee a good legal system).
What I am having trouble with is necessary and sufficient. For the life of me I cannot figure out what the necessary and sufficient parts are.
Part 2 of sentence 1 and as there cannot be a good legal system (not sufficient) where the police are not well paid (not necessary). Then the contrapositive is if there is a well paid police (sufficient) then there is a good legal system (necessary).
THen there is another sufficient necessary clause in the last part of the sentence. it follows that where the police are well paid (sufficient) there will be a good legal system(necessary)
This is my reasoning although I know it is wrong. I just can't seem to figure it out. I can put if and then either way and both hypotheticals make sense. What is the way to figure the necessary and sufficient out when there is no obvious choice (i.e. they don't use words like if or only or only if...)
Thanks so much,
Jonathan
I need some help with this:
Political theorist: The chief foundations of all governments are the legal system and the police force; and as there cannot be a good legal system where the police are not well paid, it follows that where the police are well paid there will be a good legal system.
The reasoning in the argument is not sound because it fails to establish that...
I understand why D is the correct answer (a well-paid police fore is sufficient to guarantee a good legal system).
What I am having trouble with is necessary and sufficient. For the life of me I cannot figure out what the necessary and sufficient parts are.
Part 2 of sentence 1 and as there cannot be a good legal system (not sufficient) where the police are not well paid (not necessary). Then the contrapositive is if there is a well paid police (sufficient) then there is a good legal system (necessary).
THen there is another sufficient necessary clause in the last part of the sentence. it follows that where the police are well paid (sufficient) there will be a good legal system(necessary)
This is my reasoning although I know it is wrong. I just can't seem to figure it out. I can put if and then either way and both hypotheticals make sense. What is the way to figure the necessary and sufficient out when there is no obvious choice (i.e. they don't use words like if or only or only if...)
Thanks so much,
Jonathan