- Thu Aug 20, 2015 5:34 pm
#19446
Anytime a stimulus uses the word "Every" "Each" or "All", there is always an inherent suggestion of conditionality...for example:
Each X is a Y
Every X is a Y
All X's are Y's
All statements Can be diagrammed as follows:
X Y
(if it's an X, then it's a Y)
But what if you modify a conditional statement about the past, as in:
In the past, ALL new discoveries have lead to hidden treasures.
Tomorrow, I will discover something new.
Therefore, I will find a hidden treasure tomorrow.
Is the conclusion valid or invalid?
Can you VALIDLY conclude that I will find a hidden treasure tomorrow, based solely on past instances of a modified "All" conditional statement?
...
As a golden rule, time shifts in the LSAT are usually wrong; you can't CONCLUSIVELY prove that something will occur again in the future if the only thing you know FOR SURE is what has been the case in the PAST (a mere correlation or fact pattern about history can't guarantee something with absolute certainty about the future, after all the LSAT is an exam concerned about what is the case every time and all the time, something that rests on complete certainty); but what if a conditional statement about the past is modified by a key word such as "Each", "Every", or "All"?
Do these Conditional Key Words ensure that what has been the case in the past is the case in the future? Do they act as Sufficient indicators even in the future tense?
Related to this idea,
are concept shifts such as in :
May Will
Likely Will
May not Cannot
"May" and "Will" are incompatible; "may" suggests a mere probability, but not complete certainty as "will" does
"Likely" and "will" are incompatible; "likely" suggests a fairly high probability, but not complete certainty as "will" does
"May not" and "cannot" are incompatible; "may not" suggests an ambiguous probability of may or may not occurring; "cannot" suggests a complete probability of something not occurring.
Any help understanding this will be great.
Each X is a Y
Every X is a Y
All X's are Y's
All statements Can be diagrammed as follows:
X Y
(if it's an X, then it's a Y)
But what if you modify a conditional statement about the past, as in:
In the past, ALL new discoveries have lead to hidden treasures.
Tomorrow, I will discover something new.
Therefore, I will find a hidden treasure tomorrow.
Is the conclusion valid or invalid?
Can you VALIDLY conclude that I will find a hidden treasure tomorrow, based solely on past instances of a modified "All" conditional statement?
...
As a golden rule, time shifts in the LSAT are usually wrong; you can't CONCLUSIVELY prove that something will occur again in the future if the only thing you know FOR SURE is what has been the case in the PAST (a mere correlation or fact pattern about history can't guarantee something with absolute certainty about the future, after all the LSAT is an exam concerned about what is the case every time and all the time, something that rests on complete certainty); but what if a conditional statement about the past is modified by a key word such as "Each", "Every", or "All"?
Do these Conditional Key Words ensure that what has been the case in the past is the case in the future? Do they act as Sufficient indicators even in the future tense?
Related to this idea,
are concept shifts such as in :
May Will
Likely Will
May not Cannot
"May" and "Will" are incompatible; "may" suggests a mere probability, but not complete certainty as "will" does
"Likely" and "will" are incompatible; "likely" suggests a fairly high probability, but not complete certainty as "will" does
"May not" and "cannot" are incompatible; "may not" suggests an ambiguous probability of may or may not occurring; "cannot" suggests a complete probability of something not occurring.
Any help understanding this will be great.