- Wed Oct 02, 2013 4:02 am
#11628
I have this sentence taken from real past LSAT(PT7, S4, Q5):
The government provides insurance for individuals' bank deposits, but requires the banks to pay the premiums for this insurance.
G- government
I - insurance for individuals' bank deposits
BPP - banks to pay the premiums
I am trying to come up with the diagram for this sentence in my head, thinking along the lines:
“The government provides insurance for individuals' bank deposits” The government would be G and insurance for individuals' bank deposits would be I. Therefore, the structure of this part of the argument would be G I, which is logically identical to “Only government provides insurance for individuals’ bank deposits” [admittedly, the assumption is strong]
Continuation… "The government provides insurance for individuals' bank deposits, but requires the banks to pay the premiums for this insurance". So, I am thinking, next structure G BPP. Overall structure of what has been said is G I AND BPP...the confidence wanes and then I am lost because I cannot translate it in English
After long deliberation with myself, I finally came up with I G BPP (which I now feel is correct), or in plain English, "When there is insurance for individuals’ bank deposits, banks are the ones to pay for premiums" (This is question #1, by the way, is I G BPP correct?)
I guess my next question, along with whether or not my line of thinking is correct, is it true that you can only come up with a proper diagram when there is a context? In other words, in “The government provides insurance for individuals' bank deposits” part, the diagram could as well be G I (which is what I was so confident about in the beginning), but only with the continuation of "...but requires the banks to pay the premiums for this insurance" it is possible to come up with the proper logical structure? When I had G I I could not connect pieces together, even though it felt so logical...I was so confused...I even came up with G I and BPP, but then I could not translate it in plain English...which is important to me
So my final question is (here finally comes the question ) if we do NOT have this part "...but requires the banks to pay the premiums for this insurance", and we have ONLY this part "The government provides insurance for individuals' bank deposits” would it be logically diagrammed as G I or I G? And regardless, I need to know why please
Sorry for such a long question, but I am not sure how to put it briefly, I want you to see my line of thinking regarding the structure and connections that can be made along the way. So it is an open ended question, please share your thoughts.
Regards.
Obs
P.S I am reading a preview of my Q and it looks like a blog or something
The government provides insurance for individuals' bank deposits, but requires the banks to pay the premiums for this insurance.
G- government
I - insurance for individuals' bank deposits
BPP - banks to pay the premiums
I am trying to come up with the diagram for this sentence in my head, thinking along the lines:
“The government provides insurance for individuals' bank deposits” The government would be G and insurance for individuals' bank deposits would be I. Therefore, the structure of this part of the argument would be G I, which is logically identical to “Only government provides insurance for individuals’ bank deposits” [admittedly, the assumption is strong]
Continuation… "The government provides insurance for individuals' bank deposits, but requires the banks to pay the premiums for this insurance". So, I am thinking, next structure G BPP. Overall structure of what has been said is G I AND BPP...the confidence wanes and then I am lost because I cannot translate it in English
After long deliberation with myself, I finally came up with I G BPP (which I now feel is correct), or in plain English, "When there is insurance for individuals’ bank deposits, banks are the ones to pay for premiums" (This is question #1, by the way, is I G BPP correct?)
I guess my next question, along with whether or not my line of thinking is correct, is it true that you can only come up with a proper diagram when there is a context? In other words, in “The government provides insurance for individuals' bank deposits” part, the diagram could as well be G I (which is what I was so confident about in the beginning), but only with the continuation of "...but requires the banks to pay the premiums for this insurance" it is possible to come up with the proper logical structure? When I had G I I could not connect pieces together, even though it felt so logical...I was so confused...I even came up with G I and BPP, but then I could not translate it in plain English...which is important to me
So my final question is (here finally comes the question ) if we do NOT have this part "...but requires the banks to pay the premiums for this insurance", and we have ONLY this part "The government provides insurance for individuals' bank deposits” would it be logically diagrammed as G I or I G? And regardless, I need to know why please
Sorry for such a long question, but I am not sure how to put it briefly, I want you to see my line of thinking regarding the structure and connections that can be made along the way. So it is an open ended question, please share your thoughts.
Regards.
Obs
P.S I am reading a preview of my Q and it looks like a blog or something