- Posts: 2
- Joined: Apr 08, 2021
- Tue Apr 13, 2021 10:24 pm
#86371
I am having a hard time understanding conditional reasoning conceptually. I can do the diagramming and stuff, but to put the definitions of suff and nec conditions into my own words is another story. The definition of a necessary condition in the book threw me, it says, "A necessary condition can be defined as an event or circumstance whose occurrence is required in order for a sufficient condition to occur."
I am not understanding the "in order for" part. I thought it was the complete opposite, that the sufficient condition was required in order for/enough for the necessary to occur. In my head, this definition is like a mistaken reversal, where you incorrectly say that if the necessary has occurred, the sufficient also occurs.
Thanks in advance!
I am not understanding the "in order for" part. I thought it was the complete opposite, that the sufficient condition was required in order for/enough for the necessary to occur. In my head, this definition is like a mistaken reversal, where you incorrectly say that if the necessary has occurred, the sufficient also occurs.
Thanks in advance!