- Sun Aug 07, 2022 9:02 am
#96574
Hi,
Please help, I am taking the LSAT in less than a week, and I am counting on getting 100% on the LG.
Question 9 asks the following: "Each of the following could be a pair of campers who purchase none of the same sorts of items as each other EXCEPT:"
I interpreted the question as seeking an answer of two campers that MUST (as opposed to COULD) share at least one of the same sort of items. But I picked up on this interpretation between MUST and COULD only after I checked answer-choice D concerning G and L. G and L could share at least one items but they do not have to, so then what would make it the wrong answer?
Three questions please:
First, is answer-choice D -- interpreted as G and L can share at least of the items, but they do not have since G can purchase only one of S or T while L can purchase only one of the flip side (T or S) -- the wrong answer because it COULD be true, whereas the question in D is asking about what MUST be true?
Second, the correct answer for a "could be true...except-" question, is one that cannot be true or must be false. Okay, but they threw a "none" in this mix. Is the incorporation of the word "none" what turned the question 180 degrees from a cannot be true to a a must be true?
My third and final question is more general than question 9 and it is: when a question asks for what COULD be true, and the five answer-choices feature one that Must be true, we should pick the MUST be true answer-choice, knowing that under such circumstance that the other four answer-choices have to be "CANNOT be true" or "MUST be false"; correct?
My thinking regarding my final question is that a must be true answer is an answer that could be true whereas a could be true answer does not necessarily have to be true. Accordingly, it does not make sense for the LSAT writers to ask for a could be true answer, and then give us five answer-choices one of which must be true and another could be true!
Thank you
Mazen