- Sun Jan 20, 2013 12:00 am
#25634
Complete Question Explanation
(The complete setup for this game can be found here: lsat/viewtopic.php?t=7800)
The correct answer choice is (D)
Prephrasing the answer to this Global, Must Be True question is challenging, in part because the
game lacks any “breakthrough” inferences to target in our prephrase. Without a prephrase,
proceed by the process of elimination: any answer choice that is not necessarily true will be
incorrect. Remember to reuse your prior work: while the setups to your previous questions cannot
be used to prove what must be true, they can show what is not necessarily true. Use them, but
with caution!
Answer choice (A): This answer choice may seem attractive, because G is visited either first or
second in all of the local diagrams created so far. However, this answer choice is incorrect. Even
if G is not visited first or second, the following solution would not conflict with any of the rules
in the game:
Answer choice (B): This answer choice is disproven by the second local setup to Question #13,
where M was neither second nor third:
The remaining three answer choices test your understanding of the two Numerical Distributions
discussed earlier:
Answer choice (C): This answer choice is incorrect, because G can also be visited three times, as
shown in the 3-2-1-1 distribution. The possibility of visiting G three times is also suggested by
the second setup to Question #13.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. If J were visited more than twice, then G
would have to be visited more than twice, because each visit to J requires a prior visit to G (fourth
rule). However, two destinations cannot be visited three times each. Therefore, there can be no
more than two visits to J.
Answer choice (E): This answer choice is not necessarily true, because T can be visited three
times in the 3-2-1-1 distribution. The hypothetical solution disproving answer choice (A) here can
also be used to disprove answer choice (E).
(The complete setup for this game can be found here: lsat/viewtopic.php?t=7800)
The correct answer choice is (D)
Prephrasing the answer to this Global, Must Be True question is challenging, in part because the
game lacks any “breakthrough” inferences to target in our prephrase. Without a prephrase,
proceed by the process of elimination: any answer choice that is not necessarily true will be
incorrect. Remember to reuse your prior work: while the setups to your previous questions cannot
be used to prove what must be true, they can show what is not necessarily true. Use them, but
with caution!
Answer choice (A): This answer choice may seem attractive, because G is visited either first or
second in all of the local diagrams created so far. However, this answer choice is incorrect. Even
if G is not visited first or second, the following solution would not conflict with any of the rules
in the game:
Answer choice (B): This answer choice is disproven by the second local setup to Question #13,
where M was neither second nor third:
The remaining three answer choices test your understanding of the two Numerical Distributions
discussed earlier:
Answer choice (C): This answer choice is incorrect, because G can also be visited three times, as
shown in the 3-2-1-1 distribution. The possibility of visiting G three times is also suggested by
the second setup to Question #13.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. If J were visited more than twice, then G
would have to be visited more than twice, because each visit to J requires a prior visit to G (fourth
rule). However, two destinations cannot be visited three times each. Therefore, there can be no
more than two visits to J.
Answer choice (E): This answer choice is not necessarily true, because T can be visited three
times in the 3-2-1-1 distribution. The hypothetical solution disproving answer choice (A) here can
also be used to disprove answer choice (E).
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