- Sat Jun 27, 2015 2:17 pm
#19004
This is how I originally diagrammed the problem:
AB/BA [Block] --> BC/CB [Not Block]
My reasoning:
1) "A sits next to B"
Sufficient Condition. This statement does not indicate any sense of order; it indicates proximity without spaces.
2) "then B does not sit next to C"
Necessary Condition. Similar logic was applied, as stated above.
Would you kindly teach me how to best approach this type of problem? After reading the section on conditional rules, I was quick to identify the necessary and sufficient conditions. However, based on reviewing the answer key, another approach appears to be used.
If A sits next to B, then B does not sit next to C.I was only stumped with this question. The Answer Key did not help. I would really appreciate some clarification.
-PowerScore LSAT Logic Game Bible, (c) 2014
This is how I originally diagrammed the problem:
AB/BA [Block] --> BC/CB [Not Block]
My reasoning:
1) "A sits next to B"
Sufficient Condition. This statement does not indicate any sense of order; it indicates proximity without spaces.
2) "then B does not sit next to C"
Necessary Condition. Similar logic was applied, as stated above.
Would you kindly teach me how to best approach this type of problem? After reading the section on conditional rules, I was quick to identify the necessary and sufficient conditions. However, based on reviewing the answer key, another approach appears to be used.
Live PowerScore Course Student
LSAT: Fall 2018
LSAT: Fall 2018