All Discussions
Howdy, Stranger!
It looks like you're new here. If you want to get involved, click one of these buttons!
Sign In with 7Sage
Register
Sign In with 7Sage
Sign In
Apply for Membership
Categories
All Discussions
Activity
Categories
34.3K
All Categories
28.8K
LSAT
17.4K
General
5.3K
Logical Reasoning
1.4K
Reading Comprehension
1.7K
Logic Games
72
Podcasts
192
Webinars
30
Newsletters
13
Scholarships
193
Test Center Reviews
2.4K
Study Groups
119
Study Guides/Cheat Sheets
2.6K
Specific LSAT Dates
38
November 2024 LSAT
18
October 2024 LSAT
10
September 2024 LSAT
41
August 2024 LSAT
30
June 2024 LSAT
5
April 2024 LSAT
11
February 2024 LSAT
23
January 2024 LSAT
38
November 2023 LSAT
43
October 2023 LSAT
14
September 2023 LSAT
38
August 2023 LSAT
27
June 2023 LSAT
30
Sage Advice
5.1K
Not LSAT
4.1K
Law School Admissions
13
Law School Explained
13
Bar
10
Forum Rules
675
Technical Problems
291
Off-topic
1 Like
Difference between trivial & non-trivial inference?
inactive
Alum
Member
June 2015
edited June 2015
in
General
12637 karma
Hey 7Sagers, had a few users a bit confused about the difference between trivial & non-trivial inferences on this lesson:
http://classic.7sage.com/lesson/quiz-on-drawing-valid-conclusions-2/#comment-30714
Think you guys can shed some light?
@captainoats
@linette.m
Comments
inactive
Alum
Member
June 2015
12637 karma
Bump!
blueyayfree
Alum
Member
June 2015
164 karma
A trivial inference is this, for example:
Conditional statement:
A -> B
Trivial inferences:
A -m-> B
A some B
I think that about covers it.
Sign In
or
Register
to comment.
Comments
Conditional statement:
A -> B
Trivial inferences:
A -m-> B
A some B
I think that about covers it.