- Fri Jan 20, 2017 5:34 pm
#32218
Hey there, mood.iqra, thanks for the question and welcome to the forum!
For the contrapositive of the chain in this stimulus, scroll up to Steve's explanation from a few years back - he has it all charted out. Also, read what Jon had to say here about using logical opposition to create those contrapositive statements - we don't have to say "faster" to negate "slower", we just have to say "not slower" (which allows for a tie - two countries could adopt new technologies at the same rate and thus neither would be slower than the other).
Answer B, as explained in the original post in this thread, is a Mistaken Reversal of a portion of our conditional chain. We know that if a country adopts new tech more slowly than a competitor (which is the same as saying the competitor country does so faster) then that country will be squeezed out of the market. That links the first sufficient condition in the chain to the last necessary condition. Answer B puts those two statements in reverse order without negating them - if squeezed out, then slower to adopt new tech (competitor did it faster). We can't make those sort of backwards claims in conditional reasoning - we can only go in the original direction or else use the contrapositive where we both reverse the order AND negate the terms. If NOT squeezed out, then NOT slower to adopt new tech - that's a valid statement.
Answer C has the same problem - a necessary condition (prices lowered faster) is used to prove a sufficient condition (adopted new tech). Again, no going backwards without also negating!
Answer D is a Mistaken Negation. It tells us that when a sufficient condition (adopting new tech more slowly) does NOT happen (because they are moving at the same speed, neither is slower than the other), a necessary condition (squeezed out) also does NOT happen. We can't just negate the terms! To make a valid claim we would have to reverse AND negate. There could be other ways to squeeze out a competitor, so adopting tech at the same speed proves nothing.
Take another look using the diagrams already laid out in this thread, comparing those to your own, and see if they make sense now. Remember to use logical opposition - if a country is moving at the same speed as another then it is NOT moving more slowly.
Good luck, and come back here with more questions as they come up!
For the contrapositive of the chain in this stimulus, scroll up to Steve's explanation from a few years back - he has it all charted out. Also, read what Jon had to say here about using logical opposition to create those contrapositive statements - we don't have to say "faster" to negate "slower", we just have to say "not slower" (which allows for a tie - two countries could adopt new technologies at the same rate and thus neither would be slower than the other).
Answer B, as explained in the original post in this thread, is a Mistaken Reversal of a portion of our conditional chain. We know that if a country adopts new tech more slowly than a competitor (which is the same as saying the competitor country does so faster) then that country will be squeezed out of the market. That links the first sufficient condition in the chain to the last necessary condition. Answer B puts those two statements in reverse order without negating them - if squeezed out, then slower to adopt new tech (competitor did it faster). We can't make those sort of backwards claims in conditional reasoning - we can only go in the original direction or else use the contrapositive where we both reverse the order AND negate the terms. If NOT squeezed out, then NOT slower to adopt new tech - that's a valid statement.
Answer C has the same problem - a necessary condition (prices lowered faster) is used to prove a sufficient condition (adopted new tech). Again, no going backwards without also negating!
Answer D is a Mistaken Negation. It tells us that when a sufficient condition (adopting new tech more slowly) does NOT happen (because they are moving at the same speed, neither is slower than the other), a necessary condition (squeezed out) also does NOT happen. We can't just negate the terms! To make a valid claim we would have to reverse AND negate. There could be other ways to squeeze out a competitor, so adopting tech at the same speed proves nothing.
Take another look using the diagrams already laid out in this thread, comparing those to your own, and see if they make sense now. Remember to use logical opposition - if a country is moving at the same speed as another then it is NOT moving more slowly.
Good luck, and come back here with more questions as they come up!
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