- Mon Jun 01, 2015 2:43 pm
#18823
Hi Powerscore team,
Lately I have been drilling difficult assumption questions, which often have answer choices that are more convoluted. As such, I am having a hard time finding where to "place" the logical negation in some cases. Could you help clarify?
I understand the concept of logical (not polar) negation well, but I find that some of the questions themselves are more complex in practice. Taking the example given on page 335 of the LR Bible: "The congressman always votes for gun control" and "The congressman does not always vote for gun control," the negation comes before the verb, or action---as I believe it was described in the book. Will the negation always go hand in hand with the "action" of the sentence?
I don't know if I can post LSAC material, so I will reference an instance that I am thinking about, question 3 of PT5-S1, regarding the Mayor of Plainsville. In this question, I am confused as to how to negate the correct answer, B. Would it be that he/she [the mayor] does 'not accept' that [...], or would it be that he/she [the mayor] accepts a new biz park would 'not bring' in more [...].
There are a few others like this that have stumped me but this was one that I think portrays my struggle that I could find quickly. In this question, I was able to eliminate most wrong AC's, but left to two contenders, I was really unsure and the neg test only paralyzed me.
Did I miss something in the Bible? Or is this just a rare question and process of elimination is kind of the best bet way to work around it? I am struggling to dismantle convoluted AC's and where to place the negation.
Any advice or insight is appreciated!
Rob
Lately I have been drilling difficult assumption questions, which often have answer choices that are more convoluted. As such, I am having a hard time finding where to "place" the logical negation in some cases. Could you help clarify?
I understand the concept of logical (not polar) negation well, but I find that some of the questions themselves are more complex in practice. Taking the example given on page 335 of the LR Bible: "The congressman always votes for gun control" and "The congressman does not always vote for gun control," the negation comes before the verb, or action---as I believe it was described in the book. Will the negation always go hand in hand with the "action" of the sentence?
I don't know if I can post LSAC material, so I will reference an instance that I am thinking about, question 3 of PT5-S1, regarding the Mayor of Plainsville. In this question, I am confused as to how to negate the correct answer, B. Would it be that he/she [the mayor] does 'not accept' that [...], or would it be that he/she [the mayor] accepts a new biz park would 'not bring' in more [...].
There are a few others like this that have stumped me but this was one that I think portrays my struggle that I could find quickly. In this question, I was able to eliminate most wrong AC's, but left to two contenders, I was really unsure and the neg test only paralyzed me.
Did I miss something in the Bible? Or is this just a rare question and process of elimination is kind of the best bet way to work around it? I am struggling to dismantle convoluted AC's and where to place the negation.
Any advice or insight is appreciated!
Rob