- Thu Jun 04, 2020 8:01 pm
#75947
Hey there Yusra, let me try to help.
First, in answer D, you have incorrectly diagrammed the first relationship. The sufficient condition is being with the company for more than a year. Try restating the argument in "if...then" terms - the author is saying IF you have been with the company for more than a year, THEN you can participate in the plan. The author then says that Gavin has met the sufficient condition - he has been there more than enough time - but instead of concluding that the necessary condition occurs - he CAN participate - the conclusion is that he WILL participate. We can prove he is eligible, but we cannot prove that he takes the opportunity that is available to him. Not a Mistaken Reversal, but a conclusion that brings in new information in a way that is not supported by the facts. A flaw, but the wrong flaw.
The stimulus sets up something a lot like a Mistaken Reversal, but you're right that it isn't exactly that. We don't know that Professor M is acquainted with ALL paleomycologists' work, but only that she is familiar with the work of ONE of those people. Technically, that isn't the necessary condition, but just a part of the necessary condition. But then, based on knowing that she has met at least a portion of the necessary condition (not something new - something already included in that condition), we conclude that she must meet the sufficient condition. So it is a lot like a Mistaken Reversal, but slightly modified.
The same thing happens in answer A. We don't know if ALL connecting flights were delayed, but only that Frieda's was, and from that partial info we conclude that the sufficient condition must have also occurred. It's a lot like a Mistaken Reversal, but modified in the same way (we only know that a portion of the necessary condition occurred).
Check out that relationship in answer D again, and compare it to your diagram. Keep up the good work!
First, in answer D, you have incorrectly diagrammed the first relationship. The sufficient condition is being with the company for more than a year. Try restating the argument in "if...then" terms - the author is saying IF you have been with the company for more than a year, THEN you can participate in the plan. The author then says that Gavin has met the sufficient condition - he has been there more than enough time - but instead of concluding that the necessary condition occurs - he CAN participate - the conclusion is that he WILL participate. We can prove he is eligible, but we cannot prove that he takes the opportunity that is available to him. Not a Mistaken Reversal, but a conclusion that brings in new information in a way that is not supported by the facts. A flaw, but the wrong flaw.
The stimulus sets up something a lot like a Mistaken Reversal, but you're right that it isn't exactly that. We don't know that Professor M is acquainted with ALL paleomycologists' work, but only that she is familiar with the work of ONE of those people. Technically, that isn't the necessary condition, but just a part of the necessary condition. But then, based on knowing that she has met at least a portion of the necessary condition (not something new - something already included in that condition), we conclude that she must meet the sufficient condition. So it is a lot like a Mistaken Reversal, but slightly modified.
The same thing happens in answer A. We don't know if ALL connecting flights were delayed, but only that Frieda's was, and from that partial info we conclude that the sufficient condition must have also occurred. It's a lot like a Mistaken Reversal, but modified in the same way (we only know that a portion of the necessary condition occurred).
Check out that relationship in answer D again, and compare it to your diagram. Keep up the good work!
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