Hey there studier, thanks for the question.
Dealing with just that rule about S, P and T, that looks like this:
S
P & T
The contrapositive reverses the order, negates everything, and (very important here) switches that "and" to an "or":
P or
T S
So, if either P or T is missing, S must also be missing. If S and P are both in, T must also be in, because if T was out, S would be out.
All three rules in this game come into play on this question, and some prephrased relationships sure would help. Here's that first rule:
M
O &
P
Another way to look at that rule is that M can never be in any solution that has either O or P in it. For that, we like to use the "double-not arrow", and it looks like this (broken into two distinct rules):
M
O
M
P
Now, think of the relationship between the first and second rules. They both have P in them, right? So if S is in, P is in, but if P is in, M cannot be in. That means S and M are having a fight about P - one says "he's in" and the other says "he's out". The inference you can draw based on that conflict is that S and M can never be together. That's this:
S
M
If that pair was one of our answer choices, we would be done. Sadly, it's not, so let's keep going (and all of this is work you should probably do as part of the original diagram, rather than waiting until you get to this question).
W requires M and Y, so that's:
W
M & Y
Now there's M again, a bit of a troublemaker because he doesn't get along with P, or O, or S. If W forces M in, and M forces those other three out, then we can infer a few new relationships for W. W can't go with those other three either!
W
P
W
O
W
S
One of these disagreeable pairs shows up in our answer choices, and that's answer D, the correct answer. There is no way that W and S can both be in, because W requires M to be there but S requires M to not be there (because they fight about P - see above).
All of this should show up in one long conditional chain, where W forces M and Y in, M forces O, P, and S out, and we don't know anything about T or Z. That would be my main diagram for this game, along with, perhaps, another chain based on S (forcing P and T in, M and W out, and O, Y and Z all become randoms that can come or go in any combination).
Draw that out and see if this question, and the rest of them for this game, doesn't get much easier for you. That's the key to these games where all the rules are conditional. Create the chain, make the inferences about who cannot go together, and then head into the questions.
Good luck, keep pounding!
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
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