- Fri Jun 14, 2019 5:00 pm
#65610
@whardy21
I see nothing wrong with your Conditional Statement translations. Excellent work.
The LSAT is allowed to use antonyms in the answer choices. An antonym is a negation of some term. "Historically insignificant" are all those manuscripts which were not "historically significant." Since there is a possibility that historically significant texts will be saved from acidification, it makes sense that answer (A) would carve out an exemption for them.
The takeaway is that the LSAT can use slightly different terminology if it is logically related to the terms in the stimulus, i.e. antonyms, synonyms, etc.
I see nothing wrong with your Conditional Statement translations. Excellent work.
The LSAT is allowed to use antonyms in the answer choices. An antonym is a negation of some term. "Historically insignificant" are all those manuscripts which were not "historically significant." Since there is a possibility that historically significant texts will be saved from acidification, it makes sense that answer (A) would carve out an exemption for them.
The takeaway is that the LSAT can use slightly different terminology if it is logically related to the terms in the stimulus, i.e. antonyms, synonyms, etc.