- Sat Aug 15, 2020 5:02 am
#78074
What am I missing here (page 97, "Consider one more example:"
Rule 1: E is seen exactly three patients after C.
I set up the rule as C _ _ _ E, but the book sets it up as C _ _ E.
Why do we include patient C as a patient seen after C? Patient C is not seen after patient C. That sounds contradictory.
If there are 3 patients after C, as the rule states, then how come the diagram/setup is C _ _ E? That is technically 2 patients after C, is it not? Three patients after C would, in my mind, be C _ _ _ E.
Two questions:
1. Is this an actual LSAT question?
2. If so, am I supposed to assume this language going forward on my tests? That 3 patients after C includes patient C as being a patient after itself?
Hope the question makes sense. Because I am confused!
Regards.
Rule 1: E is seen exactly three patients after C.
I set up the rule as C _ _ _ E, but the book sets it up as C _ _ E.
Why do we include patient C as a patient seen after C? Patient C is not seen after patient C. That sounds contradictory.
If there are 3 patients after C, as the rule states, then how come the diagram/setup is C _ _ E? That is technically 2 patients after C, is it not? Three patients after C would, in my mind, be C _ _ _ E.
Two questions:
1. Is this an actual LSAT question?
2. If so, am I supposed to assume this language going forward on my tests? That 3 patients after C includes patient C as being a patient after itself?
Hope the question makes sense. Because I am confused!
Regards.