- Thu Nov 01, 2012 3:48 am
#6329
Hello David,
Thank you for your time and effort in helping me, after some thoughts, here's what I think:
A sufficient condition is a hypothetical, and a necessary condition is a necessity that must occur from the hypothetical condition. So when analyzing a statement, if an element has the wording which suggest the hypothetical situation or the chances of when it will occur, then it is a sufficient condition.
For example: Jenny will have lots of balloons at her birthday.
Since "lots of balloon" is necessary in the event that her birthday occurs, therefore, "lots of balloon" is necessary condition, and "her birthday" is a sufficient condition.
For your example of Every employee at RiteCo has worked here for at least 5 years.
Since "has worked here for at least 5 years" is a requirement that must happen when you're an employee at RiteCo, then it is "has worked here for at least 5 years" is a necessary condition.
However, in your example question in page 127, question 3, "No robot can think,"
Here's something that I have thought, would common sense come into play as well? I can say there's a lot of other things that can't think, a robot is one of them, henceforth a robot is a sufficient condition by that logic. Or is there something that I can do more analytically? One of the suggestion that you made is that the easiest ways to see it is that the sufficient condition applies to an entire group or entity, which is what I would think of when I apply it to the question, since an absolute "No" was indicated in this question, I know that the term "robot" must be a Necessary Condition.
Thank you for your time and effort in helping me, after some thoughts, here's what I think:
A sufficient condition is a hypothetical, and a necessary condition is a necessity that must occur from the hypothetical condition. So when analyzing a statement, if an element has the wording which suggest the hypothetical situation or the chances of when it will occur, then it is a sufficient condition.
For example: Jenny will have lots of balloons at her birthday.
Since "lots of balloon" is necessary in the event that her birthday occurs, therefore, "lots of balloon" is necessary condition, and "her birthday" is a sufficient condition.
For your example of Every employee at RiteCo has worked here for at least 5 years.
Since "has worked here for at least 5 years" is a requirement that must happen when you're an employee at RiteCo, then it is "has worked here for at least 5 years" is a necessary condition.
However, in your example question in page 127, question 3, "No robot can think,"
Here's something that I have thought, would common sense come into play as well? I can say there's a lot of other things that can't think, a robot is one of them, henceforth a robot is a sufficient condition by that logic. Or is there something that I can do more analytically? One of the suggestion that you made is that the easiest ways to see it is that the sufficient condition applies to an entire group or entity, which is what I would think of when I apply it to the question, since an absolute "No" was indicated in this question, I know that the term "robot" must be a Necessary Condition.