- Fri Oct 12, 2018 6:52 pm
#59510
Well, Mike, isn't that stimulus alot of fun. I think the first time I read it, my brain posted a "do not care" sign and deleted it immediately. It's truly the stuff of horror, babble dressed up in formal logic.
Sadly, it's nice to get these questions right anyway, so we have to cope. This is how I proceed through a nightmare like this question.
1. There is some conditional reasoning.
2. There are some statements of probability or possibility.
Those are both things we know how to do.
Stimulus analysis:
Kind-->Want Prosper; Not Want Prosper--> Not Kind
Dislike--some--respect
Dislike-->not Content Presence; Content Presence-->Not Dislike
Not Dislike-->Kind; Not Kind-->Dislike
Inferences:
Content Presence-->Not Dislike-->Kind-->Want Prosper
Not Want Prosper-->Not Kind-->Dislike-->Not Content Presence
Ignore existence questions and other questions that belong in philosophy class and not on the LSAT. This is a test of taking a test.
Now, I have my conditions and an inference, and the question asks me what must be false. Therefore, we want something that contradicts the stimulus.
(A) Seems weird, but not contradictory.
(B) Stimulus was Content Presence-->Want Prosper (an "all" concept). This choice says Content--some--Not Want Prosper. That contradicts, so this is the correct choice.
(C) respect not linked in--eliminate.
(D) Seems weird, but not contradictory.
(E) respect not linked in--eliminate.
There you go. Try to choose short descriptions but not change the language that the stimulus is using--for instance, the logical opposite of "dislike" is "not dislike," so don't shorten that to "like" versus "dislike."
It's not weird to hate these questions, and finding them annoying to focus on doesn't mean you can't be good at them.