- Mon Jan 10, 2022 1:26 pm
#93201
I'll refer you back to my earlier answers in this thread, Lynn, and say that we really should not be talking about contrapositives here because this is not a true conditional argument. It's about probability rather than certainty, while conditional reasoning is all about certainty (the necessary condition is, well, necessary, not just probable).
Answer E is quite the trap, but it's not wrong for any conditional reason, but because it fails to address the likelihood of a bill that lacks that support passing. It's possible that while most of the bills that pass have some support, it could be that ALL of the bills that lack support also pass, and that they are just in the minority. What if every bill that lacked the support of any leader had always been passed into law, but there just hadn't been very many of them? That would mean that this bill actually looks very likely to pass, weakening, rather than strengthening, the argument.
We need to know the statistics for bills like this one, rather than the statistics for bills that have been passed or that have had some support (and are thus unlike this bill). Answer A is the one that tells us the odds for bills like the one under discussion, and it tells us that the odds aren't good.
Answer E is quite the trap, but it's not wrong for any conditional reason, but because it fails to address the likelihood of a bill that lacks that support passing. It's possible that while most of the bills that pass have some support, it could be that ALL of the bills that lack support also pass, and that they are just in the minority. What if every bill that lacked the support of any leader had always been passed into law, but there just hadn't been very many of them? That would mean that this bill actually looks very likely to pass, weakening, rather than strengthening, the argument.
We need to know the statistics for bills like this one, rather than the statistics for bills that have been passed or that have had some support (and are thus unlike this bill). Answer A is the one that tells us the odds for bills like the one under discussion, and it tells us that the odds aren't good.
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