- Fri Jan 27, 2017 6:02 pm
#32346
Thanks for asking, dtodaizzle! Author B is absolutely establishing some conditional relationships right off the bat in his passage. For example, he tells us that a transparent market is sufficient for all the info being available to everyone. The indicator is a bit subtle, but there is an implied "all" in there - in ALL transparent markets that's the case. Some conditional indicators are like that. When you think of one of our classics, "people who", that's on the list because "all" is implied there, too - ALL people who.
The conditional hits in B keep on coming, thanks to the word "only" - only if we have that info (based on transparency) can we succeed in the market. So, IF transparent, THEN all info is available, and IF we succeed THEN we must have analyzed all that info.
I think it's fair to say that the latter portion of answer B is good. I don't typically diagram conditional arguments in RC, and I wouldn't here, and while there may be some sort of mistaken reversal or negation going on in that part of the answer, I wouldn't get hung up on it. No, the problem with that answer is the first part, and what is going on in passage A. There's nothing about analyzing the available info that compensates for a lack of transparency, just a comparison to what happens in insider trading. Thus D is the better choice.
Good eye looking at the conditional relationship here, but like I said, in RC we almost never want to go down the paths of diagramming that we do so often in LR. Take a more "big picture" view of these relationships instead and you will be better served.
Keep up the good work!
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
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