- Wed Nov 28, 2012 4:37 pm
#6714
Thanks for your response.
The sentence that you reference could really be broken down into two sentences: people have leisure when resources are plentiful. People don't have leisure when resources are not plentiful (that is, scarce).
You are correct about the first part of the sentence: "when" introduces the sufficient condition, and you can diagram it as: plentiful --> leisure.
...but then the author provides the other part of the relationship, when going on to say, "...not when they are scarce." In other words, people do not have leisure when resources are scarce. Again, in this case, "when" introduces the sufficient condition:
NOT plentiful --> NOT leisure.
The contrapositive, then, is: leisure --> plentiful
This is a very tough one, and fairly unique--I wouldn't get too stressed about it.
I hope that's helpful--let me know--thanks!
~Steve
The sentence that you reference could really be broken down into two sentences: people have leisure when resources are plentiful. People don't have leisure when resources are not plentiful (that is, scarce).
You are correct about the first part of the sentence: "when" introduces the sufficient condition, and you can diagram it as: plentiful --> leisure.
...but then the author provides the other part of the relationship, when going on to say, "...not when they are scarce." In other words, people do not have leisure when resources are scarce. Again, in this case, "when" introduces the sufficient condition:
NOT plentiful --> NOT leisure.
The contrapositive, then, is: leisure --> plentiful
This is a very tough one, and fairly unique--I wouldn't get too stressed about it.
I hope that's helpful--let me know--thanks!
~Steve
Steve Stein
PowerScore Test Preparation
PowerScore Test Preparation