- Posts: 331
- Joined: Apr 06, 2021
- Fri Mar 10, 2023 8:55 pm
#99491
why is it ok to diagram honest people and honest farmer the same way?
Get expert LSAT preparation and law school admissions advice from PowerScore Test Preparation.
wisnain wrote: ↑Thu Apr 25, 2024 2:37 am Hello,Hi wisnain,
I have a quick question about the 'either A or B' logic that's been bugging me lately.
1. From what I understand, unlike how we interpret it in everyday situations, the LSAT seems to approach 'either A or B' as ‘if not A, then B’, ‘if not B, then A’, and ‘POTENTIALLY BOTH (unless explicitly stated otherwise, such as ‘not both’). How should I go about diagramming this stimulus when there isn’t any additional clarification provided?
2. Also, why doesn’t ‘either A or B’ simply translate to ‘If A, then not B’, and ‘If B, then not A’, similar to how we interpret it in everyday life? Could you help me understand why the inclusion of ‘not’ at the sufficient part is necessary?
Thank you.
Chandler H wrote: ↑Thu Apr 25, 2024 3:47 pmThanks a lot, it was very helpful!wisnain wrote: ↑Thu Apr 25, 2024 2:37 am Hello,Hi wisnain,
I have a quick question about the 'either A or B' logic that's been bugging me lately.
1. From what I understand, unlike how we interpret it in everyday situations, the LSAT seems to approach 'either A or B' as ‘if not A, then B’, ‘if not B, then A’, and ‘POTENTIALLY BOTH (unless explicitly stated otherwise, such as ‘not both’). How should I go about diagramming this stimulus when there isn’t any additional clarification provided?
2. Also, why doesn’t ‘either A or B’ simply translate to ‘If A, then not B’, and ‘If B, then not A’, similar to how we interpret it in everyday life? Could you help me understand why the inclusion of ‘not’ at the sufficient part is necessary?
Thank you.
To answer your first question, diagramming this specific stimulus requires some contextual common sense. It's true that some situations can be described as "either A, or B, or both." However, in this context, we are talking about opposites: rich/poor, honest/dishonest. You can't be both rich AND poor at the same time, no more than you can be tall and short at the same time.
Therefore, the simplest way to diagram this stimulus is as follows:
Rich Poor
Poor Rich
Honest Dishonest
Dishonest Honest
As for your second question, it could be diagrammed either way! This would be just as valid:
Poor Rich
Rich Poor
We actually have a similar fluidity in written language. You could write "If you're not rich, then you're poor," OR "If you're rich, then you're not poor." They mean the same thing, right?
Does this help?
Dana D wrote: ↑Fri Apr 26, 2024 10:29 am Hey Wisnain,
In the example question for rich/poor honest/dishonest, we are presented with binary options - you can be either / or but not both.
In your example 'Either strawberry or watermelon will be served today' as you said, the option is really to serve strawberries or watermelon or both. At least one of those fruits must be served, but you could serve both.
You diagram it as
strawberry watermelon because you know you have to serve at least one of these fruits - if you don't serve strawberries, you know watermelon is served. But because you have the option to potentially serve both, you can't diagram this as
strawberry watermelon
because you don't actually know that just because strawberries are served, watermelons aren't. You might have both served. You could only diagram like that if the rule was "either strawberries or watermelon is served but not both."
Hope that helps!
Get the most out of your LSAT Prep Plus subscription.
Analyze and track your performance with our Testing and Analytics Package.