Hi NotSureWhy! The first portion of the stimulus reads, "There are just two ways a moon could have been formed
from the planet around which it travels". I bolded the second part of that phrase because it's extremely important and can be skipped over if you're reading to quickly. It's important because it is telling us that there are only two ways Earth's moon can be made from the Earth's material...but there are potentially a lot of other ways that the Earth's moon could be made from something else in the universe! Like what? Well, maybe part of another planet drifted off and entered the Earth's orbit. Or maybe asteroids clumped together and entered the Earth's orbit. I don't know, I'm not a astronomer! But it's important to realize that while the stimulus is limiting us to two ways that the moon can be made of Earth's material, it is
not limiting us to how it can be made of anything else.
I'm guessing that skimming through that first part of the stimulus too quickly might have led to your confusion! (Try it again and see if it makes more sense, and then come back and read the rest of this explanation).
If we were to try and diagram the stimulus using conditional reasoning, it would look a little more like this:
Moon formed from material of planet it orbits around
Outer shell spun off OR Large object dislodged inside material
And the contrapositive would be:
Outer shell spun off AND
Large object dislodged inside material Moon formed from material of planet it orbits around
The question stem asks us to justify the conclusion that Earth's moon was not formed from material of Earth. Look at the contrapositive above - the necessary condition is the exact same as the conclusion that the question stem is asking us to justify! In order to reach that necessary condition, all we have to do is rule out the two possibilities contained in the sufficient condition. The stimulus tells us the Earth's moon has material different material than the Earth's outer shell, so that rules out the "Outer shell spun off" possibility. So all we have to do is look for an answer choice that will rule out the second possibility - that the moon was formed from material inside the Earth dislodged by a large object. Answer Choice (B) does just that. With both possibilities eliminated for how a moon could be formed from material of the planet it's orbiting, we can successfully conclude that the Earth's moon was not formed from a piece of the Earth - it must have been formed from something else.
Hope that helps!