Hi RG,
This stimulus gives us two pieces of information about most large nurseries:
1. Most large nurseries sell raspberry plants
primarily to commercial raspberry growers, and;
2. Most large nurseries sell
only plants guaranteed to be disease free.
These two pieces of information require two separate diagrams:
1. MLN
CRG
and
2. MLN
GDFRP, with a contrapositive of
GDFRP MLN
We're then told that Johnson receives raspberry plants from Wally's that are diseased. The problem here is that we don't know anything about guarantees or whether Wally's is a large nursery or not, so we can't simply plug the information in the stimulus into our diagrams and come out with an answer. Instead, the answer choices will fill in that information for us and either include or exclude Johnson and Wally's from the categories we have diagrammed.
Answer choice (C) is asking test takers to draw an unsupportable inference: making a contrapositive relationship from a formal logic relationship including two "most" statements. We can't logically do this, however, because the contrapositive requires the presence of a true conditional relationship in which when the sufficient condition is satisfied, the necessary condition must also be satisfied, 100% of the time. The problem here is that the "most of X selling primarily to Y" setup leaves a variance too large to say anything about what happens with
Y: if 50% of large nurseries are selling 50% of their stock of raspberry plants to commercial raspberry growers, that only accounts for 25% of the total stock of large nurseries' raspberry plants. On the other extreme, it's possible that 100% of large nurseries are selling 100% of their raspberry plants to commercial growers, meaning all large nurseries' raspberry plants are going to the commercial growers. But the wide range of possibilities (~75%) means we can't definitively say whether, if Johnson is not a commercial grower, that Wally's is not likely (<50%) to be a large nursery.
Answer choice (E) works because it deals with the conditional relationship given between large nurseries and selling only plants guaranteed to be disease-free. We know that if Wally's is a large nursery, it is more likely than not (as most do this) to guarantee that all the plants it sells are disease free. This means that Johnson's plants would more likely than have been guaranteed disease free, and that is likely they didn't arrive as guaranteed.
Hope this clears things up!