- Tue Dec 24, 2013 11:58 am
#13401
Thanks for your help, Beth. I appreciate your tips about deciding whether to draw out the conditional reasoning in attacking the problem.
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jonwg5121 wrote:Just wanted to follow up on this because I was having a bit of trouble understanding the explanation.Hello jonwg5121,
With regards to the market fluctuations statement, is that the premise for "$ disappears"?
When I did the problem, I was able to get
conclusion: $ does not exist
premise: No belief in $-->$ disappears.
However, when I tried to fit it into the model of
Premise: A
Premise: A-->B
Conclusion:B
I had some trouble.
If the conclusion ($ does not exist) is B, and the premise ($ disappears) is A, and to justify I would need to link A ($ disappears) to B ($ does not exist), what was the point of the other premise, no belief in $-->$ disappears?
Thanks!
jonwg5121 wrote:It does help, but I am having trouble converting answer choice A to a conditional statement. Which one would be considered the sufficient, "if everyone were to stop believing in it" or "anything that exists would continue to exist". Thanks!Hello jonwg5121,
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