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- Sat Jan 21, 2012 12:00 am
#44078
Setup and Rule Diagram Explanation
This is a Grouping: Partially Defined game.
Using WXYZ as the base is superior to using FGH since each of WXYZ must respond to at least one antibiotic, and the W X rule can easily be shown within the diagram. This leads to the following base diagram:
From the first two rules, because each organism responds to at least one of the antibiotics, but not all three antibiotics, each of the organisms responds to either one or two of the antibiotics.
The third rule establishes that either two of the organisms or three of the organisms must respond to F.
The fourth rule is diagrammed as:
This should also be shown within the diagram.
The fifth rule is diagrammed as:
From an inference standpoint, no organism can respond to both H and F because F brings along G, and thus F and H together means that an organism responds to all three antibiotics, a violation of the second rule. This deduction is the key to the game.
Via the contrapositive, if an organism does not respond to G, then it cannot respond to F. Consequently, if an organism does not respond to G, it must respond to H. If an organism does not respond to H, then it must respond to G (either it responds to G alone, or if it responds to F, then it also responds to G under the fifth rule).
Combining all of the above leads to the final diagram for the game:
This is a Grouping: Partially Defined game.
Using WXYZ as the base is superior to using FGH since each of WXYZ must respond to at least one antibiotic, and the W X rule can easily be shown within the diagram. This leads to the following base diagram:
From the first two rules, because each organism responds to at least one of the antibiotics, but not all three antibiotics, each of the organisms responds to either one or two of the antibiotics.
The third rule establishes that either two of the organisms or three of the organisms must respond to F.
The fourth rule is diagrammed as:
- W X
This should also be shown within the diagram.
The fifth rule is diagrammed as:
- F G
From an inference standpoint, no organism can respond to both H and F because F brings along G, and thus F and H together means that an organism responds to all three antibiotics, a violation of the second rule. This deduction is the key to the game.
Via the contrapositive, if an organism does not respond to G, then it cannot respond to F. Consequently, if an organism does not respond to G, it must respond to H. If an organism does not respond to H, then it must respond to G (either it responds to G alone, or if it responds to F, then it also responds to G under the fifth rule).
Combining all of the above leads to the final diagram for the game:
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Dave Killoran
PowerScore Test Preparation
Follow me on X/Twitter at http://twitter.com/DaveKilloran
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PowerScore Test Preparation
Follow me on X/Twitter at http://twitter.com/DaveKilloran
My LSAT Articles: http://blog.powerscore.com/lsat/author/dave-killoran
PowerScore Podcast: http://www.powerscore.com/lsat/podcast/