-  Sat Apr 01, 2017 5:03 pm
					 #33840
							   
										
										
					
					
							Hi,
I'm kind of confused at times in identifying the sufficient and necessary conditions when I encounter certain wording. An example is from the LRB when covering if and only if:
Anna will attend if and only if Basil attends.
Which comes out to
1. A and B both attend
2. Neither A nor B attend
I am more interested in the language when you break down the original premise:
1. A if B
and
2. A only if B
A if B confuses me, because it reads as B A,
  A, 
while A only if B is structurally reversed A B
 B
The term if is usually used to introduce a sufficient, so I am confused why B would be the sufficient = B A
 A
					
										
					  															  								 I'm kind of confused at times in identifying the sufficient and necessary conditions when I encounter certain wording. An example is from the LRB when covering if and only if:
Anna will attend if and only if Basil attends.
Which comes out to
1. A and B both attend
2. Neither A nor B attend
I am more interested in the language when you break down the original premise:
1. A if B
and
2. A only if B
A if B confuses me, because it reads as B
 A,
  A, while A only if B is structurally reversed A
 B
 BThe term if is usually used to introduce a sufficient, so I am confused why B would be the sufficient = B
 A
 A

 
											
 "If" introduces a sufficient condition.
  "If" introduces a sufficient condition.