- Fri Sep 21, 2018 4:51 pm
#58199
LSAT2018,
What I believe you to focus on for this question is quantity, not conditional reasoning. Remember that it can hurt you to try to force conditional reasoning onto a stimulus or answer choice when there is a better way of interpreting the information.
For these answer choices, (A) and (E) contain similar concepts:
(A) "Most, if not all," and,
(E) "Many, if not all."
These are both quantity concepts. "Most, if not all" means "more than half," and "many, if not all," means "at least many." The concept of "many" is less constraining than the concept of "most"--for example, 1 billion people is "many" by Earthly standards, but it is certainly not "most."
The only other answer choice that uses "most" is (C), and is discussing degree of importance rather than quantity.
If you try to interpret "many, if not all" (or the similar [A]), you get:
not All-->Many
not Many-->All
The contrapositive is nonsensical because how can you have All if you lack many? That tells you that the sufficient condition of the contrapositive is forbidden. You must have many, and you might have all.
It is way more work than necessary to break down the logic behind the expression--this is a quantity expression that you are probably familiar with, and it's okay to use your understanding of the common phrase. However, this is a good drill in case you come up against something you don't understand.
What I believe you to focus on for this question is quantity, not conditional reasoning. Remember that it can hurt you to try to force conditional reasoning onto a stimulus or answer choice when there is a better way of interpreting the information.
For these answer choices, (A) and (E) contain similar concepts:
(A) "Most, if not all," and,
(E) "Many, if not all."
These are both quantity concepts. "Most, if not all" means "more than half," and "many, if not all," means "at least many." The concept of "many" is less constraining than the concept of "most"--for example, 1 billion people is "many" by Earthly standards, but it is certainly not "most."
The only other answer choice that uses "most" is (C), and is discussing degree of importance rather than quantity.
If you try to interpret "many, if not all" (or the similar [A]), you get:
not All-->Many
not Many-->All
The contrapositive is nonsensical because how can you have All if you lack many? That tells you that the sufficient condition of the contrapositive is forbidden. You must have many, and you might have all.
It is way more work than necessary to break down the logic behind the expression--this is a quantity expression that you are probably familiar with, and it's okay to use your understanding of the common phrase. However, this is a good drill in case you come up against something you don't understand.