- Mon Mar 15, 2021 10:21 pm
#85512
Dear Ryan,
First of all, thank you SO MUCH for your thorough elaboration - I'm sure many others will find that just as helpful as I did.
"Everyone needs to be on a plane" - that is an even better statement that pertains to my original question. Here we go: the concept that co-pilots are not necessities, while Pilots are, makes complete sense. With that in mind, where do I derive from the logic game that everyone does need to be on a plane? I'm obviously making this hard on myself, but I still cannot see where that is. The question mentions that the Planes are "available" to fly in the air show and that the "Pilots" are "all aboard planes that are flying in the show". I assumed that if only two planes were flying in the show, not everyone being ABCdef need to be on them. Is the "all aboard" the key to seeing that everyone is going to be involved in the show? Don't laugh - I just keep seeing that ABCdef are just as available to fly as Planes 1234 are available (vs. being mandatory), so either the key is in "all aboard" and I misread it, or I need to move back my LSAT date wayyyy back. Please let me know if "all aboard" is the key here (or what else is:) Sorry about how hectic I'm making this, but I appreciate you dissecting everything the way you did! The question didn't seem as hard for me (which I'm happy to hear/read it's a hard logic game), but I definitely don't want to be my own enemy in misreading or over-reading a question, so your explanations are perfect to help tailor our (students') learning processes:) Thank you!
In regards to this specific question (being question 22), I got it correct thanks to another method that you're more than welcome to comment (or critique) if you'd like - otherwise, I hope it's ok to share on here with others as well:) Before I jump into what that method was, I just want to clarify that the way I keep reading into this question, (specifically, the mandatory participation of all pilots and all co-pilots), is what I know would throw me off had the question 22 been asking a different kind of direction. So, although I was able to get the correct answer with the method following, I am not clear on a very important concept (that everyone must fly) that could've played a bigger role in this game, so I hope it's ok to seek even more of your guidance on that, as I mentioned earlier in this post. Thank you:)
Question 22:
what helped me get was to take the four plane placeholders (___ ___ ___ ___) and treat them as planes with no specific order. In one, we have "Cf"
In another we have "A"
In another we have "d"
(I kept my variables, being the Pilots & co-pilots as Upper-case and lower-case letters in my diagram, which was helpful, respectively: so ABC as Pilots and def as co-pilots).
Since "d" is a co-pilot, it needs a "Pilot", either "ABC".
"A" and "d" never fly together. So it can't be "A".
"C" could've worked....had the question SPECIFICALLY not said that "C" and "f" are the ONLY ones in their one plane.
All we have left is "Bd".
If we look back at the variables we are working with "ABCdef", only "e" isn't assigned, per the visual below.
_Cf_ _Bd_ _A__ ___
"e" can be assigned to either "A" or "Bd", but not "Cf". Therefore, since "e" doesn't have to be with "Bd" and doesn't have to be with "A", we can't use "e" in the answers since question is a Must Be True, while "e"'s assignment in this case would be a Could Be True.
Doing this visual with all four planes and crossing out the variables and actually demonstrating that e can go either way, and it's bound to go with A, the same way that B is with d, I was able to see the prominent role of "must" be true in the question to the answers.
I'm new on here and I imagine a student's input on their method of solving something may be unorthodox - please do share with me if my gut feeling is correct and I will refrain from deviating from the traditions of your forums in the future - I only wished to help paint a more in-depth picture that someone might see the use in as well! This is a blown-out reiteration of Kelsey and Ryan's responses (above mine), but in case anyone else is having a hard time connecting the dots to the capacity that I did (pardon, I was coffee-less in the process, with a Golden Girls episode in the background) you're welcome to see the visual that helped me find the right answer in seconds!:D