- PowerScore Staff
- Posts: 1079
- Joined: Jun 26, 2013
- Mon Aug 31, 2020 12:15 pm
#78589
Hi Coleman!
Both the stimulus and answer choice (C) begin with a conditional statement that includes 2 sufficient conditions which lead to an impossible necessary condition:
Stimulus: If this is Louis Armstrong AND a concert in 1989, then he was playing after his death.
Answer choice (C): If this is a 17th century Japanese landscape AND by Frida Kahlo, then a 20th century Mexican artist was painting in Japan in the 17th century. (Note: "Only if" is a necessary condition indicator, so in this sentence the impossible necessary condition comes before the sufficient condition. The structure of the statements are the same, however, even though the order of presentation is different.)
Since the necessary conditions in both of these statements are impossible, the authors state that since one of the sufficient conditions must be true, the other one cannot be. In other words, if both things cannot be true at the same time and thing 1 is true, then thing 2 must not be true.
Stimulus: This is Louis Armstrong, so it cannot be in 1989.
Answer choice (C): This is a 17th century Japanese landscape ("the 17th century Japanese landscape it appears to be" = "what it appears to be"), so it is not by Frida Kahlo ("'by Frida Kahlo' as labeled"; "the label is wrong").
Hope this helps!
Best,
Kelsey
Both the stimulus and answer choice (C) begin with a conditional statement that includes 2 sufficient conditions which lead to an impossible necessary condition:
Stimulus: If this is Louis Armstrong AND a concert in 1989, then he was playing after his death.
Answer choice (C): If this is a 17th century Japanese landscape AND by Frida Kahlo, then a 20th century Mexican artist was painting in Japan in the 17th century. (Note: "Only if" is a necessary condition indicator, so in this sentence the impossible necessary condition comes before the sufficient condition. The structure of the statements are the same, however, even though the order of presentation is different.)
Since the necessary conditions in both of these statements are impossible, the authors state that since one of the sufficient conditions must be true, the other one cannot be. In other words, if both things cannot be true at the same time and thing 1 is true, then thing 2 must not be true.
Stimulus: This is Louis Armstrong, so it cannot be in 1989.
Answer choice (C): This is a 17th century Japanese landscape ("the 17th century Japanese landscape it appears to be" = "what it appears to be"), so it is not by Frida Kahlo ("'by Frida Kahlo' as labeled"; "the label is wrong").
Hope this helps!
Best,
Kelsey