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- Mon Jan 20, 2014 12:00 am
#42025
Setup and Rule Diagram Explanation
This is an Advanced Linear: Unbalanced: Underfunded game.
This game is reminiscent of the third game on the September 1995 LSAT. That game featured houses in one of three styles—ranch, split-level, and Tudor—on opposite sides of a street. In this game, stores on opposite sides of the street are decorated with lights of one of three colors, leading to the following initial setup:
Because only three colors of lights are available for each store, we can infer that when one color is unavailable there is only a dual-option remaining for that store. This realization is one of the keys to the game.
The first two rules establish that no adjacent stores have lights of the same color, and no stores facing each other have lights of the same color. This creates horizontal and vertical not-blocks for each color, which will be represented with “C” for color (this is a more efficient representation than drawing out all six not-blocks):
These two rules prove to have a significant effect on the game.
The third rule limits the use of yellow on each side of the street:
Side Exactly 1 Yellow
The fourth and fifth rules both place specific colors on specific stores:
Applying the third rule, no other store on the north side of the street can be yellow. Applying the second rule, store 6 cannot be yellow and store 3 cannot be red. Applying the first rule, stores 2 and 6 cannot be red. These inferences can all be shown as Not Laws:
Of course, when one color is eliminated from consideration for a store, a dual-option remains. When two colors are eliminated, the store must be decorated in lights of the remaining color. Thus, store 3 must be green, and store 6 must be green. Consequently, from the first rule, store 1 cannot be green, and must therefore be red, and store 8 cannot be green:
Filling in the remaining dual-options brings us to the final setup for the game:
This is an Advanced Linear: Unbalanced: Underfunded game.
This game is reminiscent of the third game on the September 1995 LSAT. That game featured houses in one of three styles—ranch, split-level, and Tudor—on opposite sides of a street. In this game, stores on opposite sides of the street are decorated with lights of one of three colors, leading to the following initial setup:
Because only three colors of lights are available for each store, we can infer that when one color is unavailable there is only a dual-option remaining for that store. This realization is one of the keys to the game.
The first two rules establish that no adjacent stores have lights of the same color, and no stores facing each other have lights of the same color. This creates horizontal and vertical not-blocks for each color, which will be represented with “C” for color (this is a more efficient representation than drawing out all six not-blocks):
These two rules prove to have a significant effect on the game.
The third rule limits the use of yellow on each side of the street:
Side Exactly 1 Yellow
The fourth and fifth rules both place specific colors on specific stores:
Applying the third rule, no other store on the north side of the street can be yellow. Applying the second rule, store 6 cannot be yellow and store 3 cannot be red. Applying the first rule, stores 2 and 6 cannot be red. These inferences can all be shown as Not Laws:
Of course, when one color is eliminated from consideration for a store, a dual-option remains. When two colors are eliminated, the store must be decorated in lights of the remaining color. Thus, store 3 must be green, and store 6 must be green. Consequently, from the first rule, store 1 cannot be green, and must therefore be red, and store 8 cannot be green:
Filling in the remaining dual-options brings us to the final setup for the game:
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Dave Killoran
PowerScore Test Preparation
Follow me on X/Twitter at http://twitter.com/DaveKilloran
My LSAT Articles: http://blog.powerscore.com/lsat/author/dave-killoran
PowerScore Podcast: http://www.powerscore.com/lsat/podcast/
PowerScore Test Preparation
Follow me on X/Twitter at http://twitter.com/DaveKilloran
My LSAT Articles: http://blog.powerscore.com/lsat/author/dave-killoran
PowerScore Podcast: http://www.powerscore.com/lsat/podcast/