- Mon Jul 24, 2017 4:00 pm
#37605
Hi Toby!
Great question. The initial mapping may be throwing you off a bit here as it has with other students. You are correct that "public unwillingness to provide..." is not the negation of "if other citizens are not permitted access..." Rather, the author is arguing in the conclusion that "public unwillingness" is not accurately "described" (i.e. not identical) to not permitting "access." In other words, the sufficient has not occured and is therefore negated for us, logically, in our mapping. That negation is part of the mistaken negation that the conclusion's stimulus makes. It's confusing, but it's the way that the LSAT likes to do it in certain stimuli, especially their harder questions.
Thanks for the great question!
Great question. The initial mapping may be throwing you off a bit here as it has with other students. You are correct that "public unwillingness to provide..." is not the negation of "if other citizens are not permitted access..." Rather, the author is arguing in the conclusion that "public unwillingness" is not accurately "described" (i.e. not identical) to not permitting "access." In other words, the sufficient has not occured and is therefore negated for us, logically, in our mapping. That negation is part of the mistaken negation that the conclusion's stimulus makes. It's confusing, but it's the way that the LSAT likes to do it in certain stimuli, especially their harder questions.
Thanks for the great question!