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General questions relating to LSAT Logical Reasoning.
 lunalondon
  • Posts: 20
  • Joined: Mar 26, 2017
|
#34195
Hello PS,

I am struggling with the combination of no/never/none and unless/without/except/until.

From what I have understood with unless & co., we write whatever comes after unless on the necessary side and whatever comes before it on the sufficient side negated, as such:

A unless B = NOT A --> B
(Contrapositive: NOT B --> A)

And with never/no/none, we don't move things around and only negate the necessary side, but not the sufficient side, as such:

No As are Bs = (A --> NOT B)
(Contrapositive: B --> NOT A)

Say we now make the following combination:
A never happens unless B does - does this mean we apply both rules?

So: NOT A --> NOT B = B --> A?

Sorry about the long post, wanted to make sure I was being coherent! Thank you :)
 Kristina Moen
PowerScore Staff
  • PowerScore Staff
  • Posts: 230
  • Joined: Nov 17, 2016
|
#34196
Hi Luna,

No As are B means that the groups are mutually exclusive. You can use a double-not arrow for that one! A :dblline: B

It means the same as you wrote:
A :arrow: Not B
B :arrow: Not A

But let's take another look at this sentence:
A never happens unless B does.

This means that B is necessary for A to happen. Which means you would just use the "Unless" Rule. Negate the sufficient side ("A never happens") and the part that comes after "unless" is the necessary. So this becomes A :arrow: B. This means that if A does happen, then B must happen too.

Let's try another sentence:
There is no school today unless it stops snowing.
You would diagram that as: School :arrow: Stops snowing.

Hope this helps!
 lunalondon
  • Posts: 20
  • Joined: Mar 26, 2017
|
#34216
Thank you!! :)

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