- Fri Jan 21, 2011 12:00 am
#22755
Complete Question Explanation
Must Be True-SN. The correct answer choice is (E)
The first sentence in this counter-intuitive problem can be diagrammed as follows:
The second sentence also contains a conditional statement:
Combining the two phrases gives us the chain:
The question stem is a Must Be True, and one question that should arise to you is what do we know about Patrick? All that we know about Patrick is that he is behaving irrationally and that he wants to devise a solution to his problem. Could he be an expert in some branch of psychology? Yes. We know he wants to devise a solution to his own problem, so is it possible that he understands why he is behaving irrationally? Yes. Does he have to be an expert, or does he have to understand why he behaves irrationally? No. This uncertainty regarding Patrick's exact situation eliminates answer choices (A), (B), and (C). However, that said, this is tricky and counterintuitive! The natural inclination is the think that Patrick is not an expert (because few people would be in this area), but that's not stated here and it is possible he is an expert.
Answer choice (A): This is not certain. Patrick could be an expert and he could understand why he is behaving irrationally.
Answer choice (B): This is also not known. It is possible Patrick is an expert.
Note that if you select this answer choice, then via the contrapositive you would also be forced to select answer choice (A). Any answer choice that appears to make another answer choice correct is automatically incorrect due to the uniqueness of correct answers (there can be one and only one correct answer choice).
Answer choice (C): While this is attractive, this is also unknown. Since the problem is Patrick's, it's not "someone else's problem" and thus perhaps he can devise a solution to his own problem.
Answer choice (D): This answer is incorrect since it offers an opinion ("Charles should not...").
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer. This answer is the contrapositive of the combined statement above, and can be diagrammed as follows:
Must Be True-SN. The correct answer choice is (E)
The first sentence in this counter-intuitive problem can be diagrammed as follows:
- E = expert in some branch of psychology
UIBP = understand irrational behavior of Patrick
- Sentence 1: UIBP E
The second sentence also contains a conditional statement:
- E = expert in some branch of psychology
COS = certain of solving someone else's problem
- Sentence 2: E COS
Combining the two phrases gives us the chain:
- Sentences 1 and 2 combined: UIBP E COS
The question stem is a Must Be True, and one question that should arise to you is what do we know about Patrick? All that we know about Patrick is that he is behaving irrationally and that he wants to devise a solution to his problem. Could he be an expert in some branch of psychology? Yes. We know he wants to devise a solution to his own problem, so is it possible that he understands why he is behaving irrationally? Yes. Does he have to be an expert, or does he have to understand why he behaves irrationally? No. This uncertainty regarding Patrick's exact situation eliminates answer choices (A), (B), and (C). However, that said, this is tricky and counterintuitive! The natural inclination is the think that Patrick is not an expert (because few people would be in this area), but that's not stated here and it is possible he is an expert.
Answer choice (A): This is not certain. Patrick could be an expert and he could understand why he is behaving irrationally.
Answer choice (B): This is also not known. It is possible Patrick is an expert.
Note that if you select this answer choice, then via the contrapositive you would also be forced to select answer choice (A). Any answer choice that appears to make another answer choice correct is automatically incorrect due to the uniqueness of correct answers (there can be one and only one correct answer choice).
Answer choice (C): While this is attractive, this is also unknown. Since the problem is Patrick's, it's not "someone else's problem" and thus perhaps he can devise a solution to his own problem.
Answer choice (D): This answer is incorrect since it offers an opinion ("Charles should not...").
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer. This answer is the contrapositive of the combined statement above, and can be diagrammed as follows:
- Answer choice (E): COS UIBP (the contrapositive)