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General questions relating to LSAT Logical Reasoning.
 akalsi
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#16168
I'm having a bit of difficulty understanding an aspect of Cannot be True questions and conditional reasoning. I understand how the correct answer choice in this situation is: sufficient condition occurs but the necessary condition does not occur. However, I was wondering why a mistaken negation or mistaken reversal of the initial conditional statement could be true?
 Ron Gore
PowerScore Staff
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#16179
Hi Akalsi!

Thank you for your question, which goes not just to Cannot Be True questions, but to conditional reasoning overall. Let's consider a simple example:

"If A then B."

We would diagram this relationship as

A ..... :arrow: ..... B

and the contrapositive is

B ..... :arrow: ..... A.

Remember that it is only the sufficient condition that shows us anything. In the case of this original relationship and the contrapositive, our two sufficient conditions are A and B. The two necessary conditions, B and A, don't show us anything.

So, in a Mistaken Reversal, the error is in saying that because we have B, then we must have A. That's treating the necessary condition, B, as if it were a sufficient condition. B can't show us anything definitive about A, which means it can't show us that A must be present. It also can't show us that A must be absent. Since B can't show us anything definitive about A, then the presence or absence of A is up in the air. It's a Could Be True. The only reason a Mistaken Reversal is a "mistake" is that it treats a Could Be True ("If B then A might be present, but we don't actually know") as if it were a Must Be True ("If B then A must be present").

And the same thing goes for a Mistaken Negation. Remember that A is only properly a necessary condition, found in the contrapositive B ..... :arrow: ..... A. Since A is a necessary condition, it can't show us anything, just like B could not show us anything.

So, in a Cannot Be True question, a Mistaken Reversal or a Mistaken Negation is incorrect because it is a Could Be True.

Please let me know if I can be of further assistance.

Thanks,

Ron
 akalsi
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  • Joined: Aug 25, 2014
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#16181
Thanks so much! I think I understand now why the mistaken reversal and mistaken negation could be true.
 Ron Gore
PowerScore Staff
  • PowerScore Staff
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  • Joined: May 15, 2013
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#16183
Glad to hear it! Please let us know if we can help further.

Ron

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