- Sat Nov 29, 2014 7:38 pm
#17524
Hi,
I have some questions regarding the "match the premises" portion of Parallel Reasoning questions. I understand that the same wording rules that are used for the conclusion apply here. However, does this also mean that if certain elements (conditionals, causal relationships, opinions) that are presented in premises of the stimulus should also be presented in the premises of the answer choices?
Also, if a stimulus presents 2 premises and a conclusion, would the correct answer choice have to present a similar number as well (2 premises and conclusion), although it doesn't have to be presented in the same order? With that said, if there are certain other types of method of reasoning presented in the stimulus, such as presuppositions or subsidiary conclusions, would this idea also be paralleled? I guess I'm basically asking if all elements in the structure of the stimulus have to match the answer choice without taking into account specifics.
Thanks in advance for your help!
I have some questions regarding the "match the premises" portion of Parallel Reasoning questions. I understand that the same wording rules that are used for the conclusion apply here. However, does this also mean that if certain elements (conditionals, causal relationships, opinions) that are presented in premises of the stimulus should also be presented in the premises of the answer choices?
Also, if a stimulus presents 2 premises and a conclusion, would the correct answer choice have to present a similar number as well (2 premises and conclusion), although it doesn't have to be presented in the same order? With that said, if there are certain other types of method of reasoning presented in the stimulus, such as presuppositions or subsidiary conclusions, would this idea also be paralleled? I guess I'm basically asking if all elements in the structure of the stimulus have to match the answer choice without taking into account specifics.
Thanks in advance for your help!