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- Wed Nov 29, 2017 4:22 pm
#41984
Setup and Rule Diagram Explanation
This is an Advanced Linear: Balanced game.
The setup to this game requires some manipulation. Since each of the paintings has two characteristics, oil or watercolor and nineteenth-century or twentieth-century, each of the paintings requires two separate spaces to represent these characteristics. In a normal linear game this could easily be represented by double-stacking the characteristics above each painting. However, since the paintings themselves are stacked into two rows, this would cause unnecessary confusion. Thus, we have chosen to represent the characteristics of each painting side-by-side. For example, 19O would represent a nineteenth-century oil painting, and 20W would represent a twentieth-century watercolor. The diagram and rules are then relatively easy to represent:
This game uses several two-value systems. Since each painting must be either an oil or watercolor, but not both, if a painting is not a watercolor then it must be an oil, and if a painting is not an oil then it must be a watercolor. The same type of reasoning can be applied to the nineteenth- and twentieth-century paintings. This leads to several powerful inferences in question #15.
This is an Advanced Linear: Balanced game.
The setup to this game requires some manipulation. Since each of the paintings has two characteristics, oil or watercolor and nineteenth-century or twentieth-century, each of the paintings requires two separate spaces to represent these characteristics. In a normal linear game this could easily be represented by double-stacking the characteristics above each painting. However, since the paintings themselves are stacked into two rows, this would cause unnecessary confusion. Thus, we have chosen to represent the characteristics of each painting side-by-side. For example, 19O would represent a nineteenth-century oil painting, and 20W would represent a twentieth-century watercolor. The diagram and rules are then relatively easy to represent:
This game uses several two-value systems. Since each painting must be either an oil or watercolor, but not both, if a painting is not a watercolor then it must be an oil, and if a painting is not an oil then it must be a watercolor. The same type of reasoning can be applied to the nineteenth- and twentieth-century paintings. This leads to several powerful inferences in question #15.
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Dave Killoran
PowerScore Test Preparation
Follow me on X/Twitter at http://twitter.com/DaveKilloran
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PowerScore Test Preparation
Follow me on X/Twitter at http://twitter.com/DaveKilloran
My LSAT Articles: http://blog.powerscore.com/lsat/author/dave-killoran
PowerScore Podcast: http://www.powerscore.com/lsat/podcast/