- Mon Jun 01, 2020 1:14 pm
#75867
Hi Hailey,
I'm glad you asked, because this is one of the things that can be a little frustrating as you're developing a sense for the presence of conditional reasoning.
A couple guides: first, remember that conditional reasoning is about establishing a relationship in which the occurrence (or presence) of one thing is necessary for the occurrence (or presence) of another. If a statement's meaning (regardless of the language used) is that one thing's occurrence is necessary for another's, you've got a conditional statement. Second, there's definitely a vocabulary of terms and statement types beyond just the most common indicators terms (which is where we want students to start, but never to finish!).
The first sentence of this stimulus uses the term "presupposed," which you can think of in this context as an indicator of a necessary condition. Something "presupposed," is something "assumed," and something "assumed" is something necessary. Since that first sentence is saying that certain writers thought the presence of a noble class is necessary to the presence of feudalism, it's saying those writers thought there was a conditional relationship between those things.
The takeaway is to keep an eye on the term "presupposed," particularly where it creates a relationship between the presence or occurrence of two different things. In that context, it's likely a necessary condition indicator.
Hopefully this helps!
Jeremy
I'm glad you asked, because this is one of the things that can be a little frustrating as you're developing a sense for the presence of conditional reasoning.
A couple guides: first, remember that conditional reasoning is about establishing a relationship in which the occurrence (or presence) of one thing is necessary for the occurrence (or presence) of another. If a statement's meaning (regardless of the language used) is that one thing's occurrence is necessary for another's, you've got a conditional statement. Second, there's definitely a vocabulary of terms and statement types beyond just the most common indicators terms (which is where we want students to start, but never to finish!).
The first sentence of this stimulus uses the term "presupposed," which you can think of in this context as an indicator of a necessary condition. Something "presupposed," is something "assumed," and something "assumed" is something necessary. Since that first sentence is saying that certain writers thought the presence of a noble class is necessary to the presence of feudalism, it's saying those writers thought there was a conditional relationship between those things.
The takeaway is to keep an eye on the term "presupposed," particularly where it creates a relationship between the presence or occurrence of two different things. In that context, it's likely a necessary condition indicator.
Hopefully this helps!
Jeremy
Jeremy Press
LSAT Instructor and law school admissions consultant
Follow me on Twitter at: https://twitter.com/JeremyLSAT
LSAT Instructor and law school admissions consultant
Follow me on Twitter at: https://twitter.com/JeremyLSAT