Hi there, I just wanted to clarify my understanding of nested conditionals (using this example).
If we have the following....
(1) Bill favored by most people
AND
(3) [well-functioning democracy
promptly passed into law]
(2) Bill does not violate HR
...how does the conclusion in the stimulus actually follow from the premises in the argument? Is it because the stimulus tells us that ~(promptly passed into law), and with that and answer choice E) we can infer that ~(Well-functioning democracy)? Just a simple contrapositive relationship. That's my intuition but I just want to be sure. In words: "If a bill is favored by most people and the bill does not violate HR, then IF there is a well-functioning democracy, the law is promptly passed. Since The law is NOT promptly passed, it must be the cause that it is not a well-functioning democracy."
I find it interesting and slightly confusing that when something in the necessary condition fails to take place in a nested conditional (3), the sufficient condition (1) or (2) is not also ruled out. This leads me to a more general question as well if thats okay...
I understand the contrapositive of the nested conditional above as being:
NOT [well-functioning democracy
promptly passed into law]
NOT Bill favored by most people OR Bill does violate HR
Given this, Im wondering what kind of scenario would exhibit NOT [well-functioning democracy
promptly passed into law]. Am I correct that the NOT [promptly passed into law] does not by itself entail that NOT [well-functioning democracy
promptly passed into law]?
Would we instead need something like:
(*) NOT [promptly passed into law] AND [Well-functioning democracy]
I'm having a little bit of a hard time articulating this second question so apologies in advance.