- Tue May 24, 2016 1:28 pm
#25434
This word always throws me because of the arbitrary nature of what condition it's introducing. In general I understand that 'only' and 'only if' introduce a necessary, while 'the only' introduces a sufficient. However, in this question I'm confused:
"Educator: Traditional classroom education is ineffective because education in such an environment is not truly a social process and only social processes can develop students' insights. In the traditional classroom, the teacher acts from outside the group and interaction between teachers and students is rigid and artificial.
The educator's conclusion follows logically if which one of the following is assumed?"
When I diagram the sentence "only social processes can develop students' insight" with the SP as the sufficient condition and DSI as the necessary condition, I can accurately follow the trail of logic to hit upon the correct answer, however this is incorrect since the only in this instance should introduce the necessary, making it DSI --> SP
This does not work in my conditional diagram to get the right answer. What am I missing here?
Thanks!
"Educator: Traditional classroom education is ineffective because education in such an environment is not truly a social process and only social processes can develop students' insights. In the traditional classroom, the teacher acts from outside the group and interaction between teachers and students is rigid and artificial.
The educator's conclusion follows logically if which one of the following is assumed?"
When I diagram the sentence "only social processes can develop students' insight" with the SP as the sufficient condition and DSI as the necessary condition, I can accurately follow the trail of logic to hit upon the correct answer, however this is incorrect since the only in this instance should introduce the necessary, making it DSI --> SP
This does not work in my conditional diagram to get the right answer. What am I missing here?
Thanks!