Nothing exists without a sufficient reason for why it exists rather than does not exist.
“It needs to be a separate body with sufficient powers, sufficient resources to look into that and make clear findings into whether there should be any prosecutions.”
Rural communities might become self-sufficient, but they would soon become strategically vulnerable and be forced to defend themselves against starving urban raiders from the far-from-self-sufficient, densely populated conurbations.
In Reasons and Persons (1984) and other works, he argued that one’s special concern is not with personal identity per se but with the psychological continuity and connectedness that is normally sufficient for personal identity but is not sufficient in cases of fission.
In this context, Leibniz defines a sufficient reason as a sufficient condition.
In order to be valid, “sufficient causal condition” must be used in the same sense throughout the argument.
We will use a simple example, which is also in his paper, to show how a sufficient condition can be obtained.
When Leibniz insists that every truth or fact requires a sufficient reason, what does he mean by “sufficient reason?”
He says that there are many cases where a fact has a sufficient reason and no cases where fact is known not to have a sufficient reason.
Second, we've seen that when the agent has a sufficient reason to do a particular act and freely does that act, the sufficient reason or motive is not a determining cause of the agent's act.
To conclude that there are exactly two Gs in region S, all that is required is a sufficient condition for x and y to be distinct, and a sufficient condition for z to be identical with x or y.
This article shows how elusive the quest is for a definition of the terms “necessary” and “sufficient”, indicating the existence of systematic ambiguity in the concepts of necessary and sufficient conditions.
Indeed, if crossing species boundaries is sufficient for unnaturalness, and if unnaturalness is sufficient for wrongfulness, then the creation of mules and all other cross-species hybrids, even hybrid lilies, would be wrong.
Leibniz (1646–1716) appealed to a strengthened principle of sufficient reason, according to which “no fact can be real or existing and no statement true without a sufficient reason for its being so and not otherwise” (Monadology, §32).
If one condition or set of conditions is sufficient for (ensures) another, then the other is necessary (essential) for it, and conversely, if one condition or set of conditions is necessary (essential) for another, then that other is sufficient for (ensures) it.
Given the standard theory, necessary and sufficient conditions are converses of each other, and so there is a kind of mirroring or reciprocity between the two: B’s being a necessary condition of A is equivalent to A’s being a sufficient condition of B (and vice versa).
Plaid Cymru leader Adam Price said: "The conversations I'm having on a daily basis, the messages I'm receiving from people in the front line in health and care sectors, is that they're not receiving the PPE of sufficient quality, the right type and in sufficient numbers."
M1: A child raised in a particular moral community almost inevitably ends up judging in accordance with an idiolect of the local moral code despite lack of sufficient explicit instruction, lack of sufficient negative feedback for moral mistakes, and moral mistakes by caretakers.
His Principle of Sufficient Reason states that “nothing takes place without a sufficient reason; in other words,…nothing occurs for which it would be impossible for someone who has enough knowledge of things to give a reason adequate to determine why the thing is as it is and not otherwise.”
It is therefore not causally sufficient for the occurrence of s in the strong sense of sufficient condition employed in the argument from sovereignty, namely, that x is a causally sufficient condition of y in the strong sense if and only if, given x alone, y exists or occurs.
sufficient
adj all
- of a quantity that can fulfill a need or requirement but without being abundant
Example: sufficient food
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