- Wed Nov 22, 2017 12:22 am
#41803
Hi! I'm almost 10 days out of the December LSAT (my first one!) and I want to make sure I have a solid understanding of the two most common types of reasoning we've gone over (conditional and causal). Can somebody--preferably and LSAT expert--let me know if I'm on the right track? (I just typed these explanations out about five minutes ago.) Thanks!
"Conditional Reasoning describes an absolute relationship between two events. The sufficient condition is ENOUGH for the necessary condition to occur; in other words, when the sufficient condition occurs, the necessary condition occurs. However, when the necessary condition occurs, the sufficient condition MIGHT occur or might not—we don’t know. We know the necessary condition is REQUIRED for the sufficient condition to occur.
Errors of reasoning include the most common Mistaken Reversal when the necessary condition is switched with the sufficient condition claiming that the necessary condition is enough to guarantee the sufficient condition’s occurrence. Mistaken Negation is when a statement claims that if the sufficient condition doesn’t occur, then the necessary condition will not occur either. The only true logical statement we know is the contrapositive; which occurs when the conditions are flipped and both negated. NOTE: when a condition is flipped and negated (hence its contrapositive is taken), the “and” switches to “or” and vice versa. The most effective way to weaken a conditional relationship is to show that when the sufficient condition occurs, the necessary condition doesn’t automatically follow.
NOTE: whatever necessary indicators of unless, without, except, until is describing ends up becoming the necessary and the remaining indictor is NEGATED and becomes the sufficient.
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Casual Reasoning is inherently flawed on this test. The claim of an LSAT author is that X event CAUSED Y event and ONLY X event caused it EVERY SINGLE TIME. The author is presumed to have tested every other possible cause for EVENT Y but is 100% SURE it is EVENT X. The most effective way to weaken a causal relationship is to introduce an outside cause for this given effect. Other ways to weaken include showing that there could be a third, confounding variable that was the true cause for both events to occur; showing that the relationship is in fact reversed; the data is off; and the effect happens but the cause doesn’t; and when the cause happens, the effect doesn't."
"Conditional Reasoning describes an absolute relationship between two events. The sufficient condition is ENOUGH for the necessary condition to occur; in other words, when the sufficient condition occurs, the necessary condition occurs. However, when the necessary condition occurs, the sufficient condition MIGHT occur or might not—we don’t know. We know the necessary condition is REQUIRED for the sufficient condition to occur.
Errors of reasoning include the most common Mistaken Reversal when the necessary condition is switched with the sufficient condition claiming that the necessary condition is enough to guarantee the sufficient condition’s occurrence. Mistaken Negation is when a statement claims that if the sufficient condition doesn’t occur, then the necessary condition will not occur either. The only true logical statement we know is the contrapositive; which occurs when the conditions are flipped and both negated. NOTE: when a condition is flipped and negated (hence its contrapositive is taken), the “and” switches to “or” and vice versa. The most effective way to weaken a conditional relationship is to show that when the sufficient condition occurs, the necessary condition doesn’t automatically follow.
NOTE: whatever necessary indicators of unless, without, except, until is describing ends up becoming the necessary and the remaining indictor is NEGATED and becomes the sufficient.
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Casual Reasoning is inherently flawed on this test. The claim of an LSAT author is that X event CAUSED Y event and ONLY X event caused it EVERY SINGLE TIME. The author is presumed to have tested every other possible cause for EVENT Y but is 100% SURE it is EVENT X. The most effective way to weaken a causal relationship is to introduce an outside cause for this given effect. Other ways to weaken include showing that there could be a third, confounding variable that was the true cause for both events to occur; showing that the relationship is in fact reversed; the data is off; and the effect happens but the cause doesn’t; and when the cause happens, the effect doesn't."