Hi M,
Thanks for the question! Consider that the typical Mistaken Reversal actually looks something like this:
- Premise: A B
Premise: B
Conclusion: A
That second premise-to-conclusion relationship implies that the author believes B
A, which is the reverse of the original premise. So, you are typically looking for that premise-to-conclusion relationship when we talk about contrapositives, reversals, negations, repeats, etc.
In this argument, they set up the argument in a different premise/conclusion order, namely putting the conclusion in the middle:
- Premise: A B
Conclusion: A
Premise: B
That has no functional effect on meaning, but it can be confusing. So, applying the terms of the argument, we get:
- Premise: N&C not satisfied
Conclusion: N&C
Premise: not satisfied
The LSAT often forces you to see equivalences in terms, such as "not satisfy " being the same as "clearly unhappy" in this problem. So, this is something you learn to look for (and you'll get better at that if this gave you trouble). Then, they will use order to cause confusion. Despite that, the premise-to-conclusion relationship implied in the second half of the stimulus is a Mistaken Reversal: not satisfied
N&C.
Hopefully that helps clear this up a bit, but once you do a bunch of conditional problems, this will seem a
lot easier.
Thanks!