- Tue Nov 17, 2020 8:04 am
#81217
1. For context and as an example - I initially drew the diagrams as A->F->/E (realized that might not work) so then I did an arrow with two spears pointing to two necessary conditions (which I cant properly diagram here)
A --> F
-->/E (connect both arrows together from their starting points) .
It wasn't until I got to the answer key that I saw the relationship represented as "and". I didn't see this covered in the book so when do we use "and" in diagramming? Does the word "but" always mean "and" in diagraming?
The second and third question are related but I will separate them, hopefully for clarity.
2. I really like the picture shown here but let's say that we wanted to chain as many as possible variables, which was my impulse
The contrapositive of the first diagram is
/F or E /A /O &/S
If I wanted to link it with L E and /M
How do I represent all of the variables at their fullest capacity?
L E or /F /A /O&/S
E & /M
and on that note, why in the picture is "e or /f" not included to show the full chain? as in why is it omitted? (I'm wondering in the case that this question had a bunch of other questions that might make that piece of the chain relevant)
3. I noticed that med2law stated "I know the E + M portion above seems to imply that if E + M then A, but I didn't worry about that because E alone is sufficient for A" (so basically drop the & M )
but according to what I have read in the text book I am understanding that E AND M both have to occur together in order for the /A to be triggered. I'm not understanding how an "and" can be dropped from and how the E has now on its own, or in isolation has become sufficient for /A .
I like the picture because it does a nice job of showing how E alone triggers /A etc but I'm not understanding how or why the M does not have to happen together with E to trigger /A
Jeremy Press wrote:Hi med2law,Hello - I've been looking through all the threads to avoid trying to start a new chat and I think this answer does well for my line of questioning (even though the answers might have been implied or hinted at in other responses, I couldn't find answers to them directly).
You're dead on with this one! Really nice work.
Here's how you could represent your chain to avoid the trap you're talking about:
The problem you're trying to avoid is the primary reason we recommend diagramming two (or more) necessary (or sufficient) conditions vertically rather than horizontally.
I hope this helps!
1. For context and as an example - I initially drew the diagrams as A->F->/E (realized that might not work) so then I did an arrow with two spears pointing to two necessary conditions (which I cant properly diagram here)
A --> F
-->/E (connect both arrows together from their starting points) .
It wasn't until I got to the answer key that I saw the relationship represented as "and". I didn't see this covered in the book so when do we use "and" in diagramming? Does the word "but" always mean "and" in diagraming?
The second and third question are related but I will separate them, hopefully for clarity.
2. I really like the picture shown here but let's say that we wanted to chain as many as possible variables, which was my impulse
The contrapositive of the first diagram is
/F or E /A /O &/S
If I wanted to link it with L E and /M
How do I represent all of the variables at their fullest capacity?
L E or /F /A /O&/S
E & /M
and on that note, why in the picture is "e or /f" not included to show the full chain? as in why is it omitted? (I'm wondering in the case that this question had a bunch of other questions that might make that piece of the chain relevant)
3. I noticed that med2law stated "I know the E + M portion above seems to imply that if E + M then A, but I didn't worry about that because E alone is sufficient for A" (so basically drop the & M )
but according to what I have read in the text book I am understanding that E AND M both have to occur together in order for the /A to be triggered. I'm not understanding how an "and" can be dropped from and how the E has now on its own, or in isolation has become sufficient for /A .
I like the picture because it does a nice job of showing how E alone triggers /A etc but I'm not understanding how or why the M does not have to happen together with E to trigger /A