- Thu Jul 19, 2018 5:33 pm
#48130
Your approach to the double negative is what got you in trouble there, Sophia123! Be careful about preserving the original meaning of the claim when you try to translate it to make it less awkward. See Nikki's explanation of answer C earlier in this thread to see how it should really go. Or, for a different approach, try this:
Imagine the WW produced 10 new shows last year. Most of them - let's say 7 - were cancelled. That puts the shows in two groups - 7 in the cancelled group, 3 in the not-cancelled group.
Answer choice C is saying that none of the 3 shows in the not-cancelled group were police dramas. Put another way, all of the shows that survived were something other than police dramas.
What does that tell us about the other group, the 7 that were cancelled? Nothing! We only know that the 3 shows that made it were not police dramas. Perhaps none of the 10 were police dramas? That would still be consistent with answer C, but would not help the argument that they are likely to have a lot of police dramas cancelled this year.
Be sure when you take a mechanical approach, like translating a double negative into a positive, that you don't lose the intended meaning of the claim! Don't not be careful!
Imagine the WW produced 10 new shows last year. Most of them - let's say 7 - were cancelled. That puts the shows in two groups - 7 in the cancelled group, 3 in the not-cancelled group.
Answer choice C is saying that none of the 3 shows in the not-cancelled group were police dramas. Put another way, all of the shows that survived were something other than police dramas.
What does that tell us about the other group, the 7 that were cancelled? Nothing! We only know that the 3 shows that made it were not police dramas. Perhaps none of the 10 were police dramas? That would still be consistent with answer C, but would not help the argument that they are likely to have a lot of police dramas cancelled this year.
Be sure when you take a mechanical approach, like translating a double negative into a positive, that you don't lose the intended meaning of the claim! Don't not be careful!
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
Follow me on Twitter at https://twitter.com/LSATadam
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
Follow me on Twitter at https://twitter.com/LSATadam