riabobiia wrote: ↑Wed Dec 06, 2023 5:13 pm
Hi!
I'm still having a bit of trouble wrapping my mind around this question since it seems easy in terms of simply looking at the stimulus but it requires a lot of diagramming.
For this question, we have to diagram the conditional before the colon and then the conditional after the colon and then compare them to each other, and then diagram and compare each answer choice the same way before comparing it to the stimulus?
Is there an easier way to do this without getting totally mixed up and lost in the amount of comparisons and conditional statements we're required to diagram? I'm worried about coming across something like this on a test and being able to complete it in the little time given.
Hi Ria,
Completely understandable! What I'll do is break this down/rephrase it with full words first, and then translate that into diagramming language. With pattern of reasoning questions, we want to find what matches we can find between the stimulus and the answer choice.
Rephrase of the stimulus: The notion that "if a government doesn't support, then it doesn't allow" is absurd, because this could be rephrased as "if no subsidy, then no allowance of that art".
In diagramming, this could look like: ~no support --> ~allow, which is rephrased as ~subsidy --> ~allow
In this case subsidy stands in for support from the government. Now let's look at the answer choices.
Answer choice (A): absurd claim: ~arrest --> ~break the law. Reword claim: break law --> arrest
Answer choice (B): absurd claim: ~arrest --> ~break the law. Reword claim: arrest --> break the law
Answer choice (C): absurd claim: govt. grant --> successful. Reword claim: ~govt. grant --> ~successful
Answer choice (D): absurd claim: govt. grant --> successful. Reword claim: ~govt. grant --> successful.
Answer choice (E): absurd claim: govt. grant --> successful. Reword claim: ~govt. grant --> ~research allowance.
Notice how in our stimulus, our absurd claim and our reworded claim are logically consistent: they both say the same thing. Answer choice (A) also follows this pattern: the absurd claim and the reworded claim are contrapositives, so they are logically consistent and the same.
Answer choices (B) through (E) however, do not have logical consistency between their absurd claims and their reworded claims. They commit Mistaken Reversal or Mistaken Negation fallacies, or with answer choice (E), a new concept is introduced altogether.
Answer choice (A) is correct because it matches the stimulus in that both the purported absurd claim and the reworded claim are actually saying the same thing. In this case, it would be helpful to diagram the initial stimulus, and diagram the answer choices to see what remains similar.
Unfortunately, diagramming will probably be the best strategy to be accurate with this question, as it requires a strong logical grasp that is not easy for most intuitively. The good thing is, diagramming becomes much easier with time and practice.
Hope this helps!