Hi Powerscore!
I just wanted to begin my first-ever post on here by saying that I've been using the forum for a while (at least the past few months) and I appreciate all of the work that you do in dissecting questions and explaining why answers are correct/incorrect.
I'm scheduled to take the LSAT-Flex in February, so I anticipate posting a few times as needed as I go through PrepTests. (I also have the PowerScore Bible Trilogy, although I got those back in 2017, and those have been helpful as well.)
So here's my post: I erroneously chose answer choice A, and would like clarification as to what separates A from C (the correct answer choice). i do get that C is correct, because C provides the proper linkage between the third sentence of the stimulus (the information concerning safety violations) and the conclusion by way of the judge ordering the journalist to reveal the informant's identity (the journalist will surely reveal the informant's identity), as noted in the first non-Administrator post on this.
My line of thinking with A (the informant's information is known to be false), at the time I did this section timed, was:
First sentence of the stimulus: Journalist promised NOT to reveal the informant's identity --> the information from the informant does NOT turn out to be false
With the contrapositive of the above, as I understand it to be:
The information turns out to BE false --> Journalist DOESN'T promise NOT to reveal identity. (i.e. the journalist MAY reveal identity)
And then I thought, "ok! A is the sufficient indicator of the contrapositive (above), so A seems to be good!"
Now, as I typed this, I realized that I may committed a mistaken reversal during my timed section: I mistakenly assumed "so long as", separating the concepts of revealing the informant's identity and the information not turning out to be false, as introducing the necessary, when it's actually introducing the sufficient (as I understand from this article within Powerscore's Forum:
viewtopic.php?t=27015).
So it appears that the first sentence should have been read as:
The information DIDN'T turn out to be false --> Journalist promised NOT to reveal identity
CONTRAPOSITIVE: Promised to reveal identity --> the information turned out to be false
So, is A incorrect because it relies on a mistaken reversal of the conditional in the first sentence as noted above? This may have been the first time seeing a conditional using "so long as" type language, which I found unusual in the several LR sections I've done to date.
Thanks very much for your input on this! I realize it's a long response on here, but am intending to share my thought process on here, and in case any LSAT studiers happen to have the same thought process that I did at the time of posting this.