Nested conditionals ARE confusing, LSAT-2018! First, let's look at the negation of the conditional claim: Nikki's example was NOT (Get In
Wait). What that is saying in plain English is "it's not true that to get in you have to wait". In other words, it is DENYING that there is such a conditional relationship. That's not the same as saying Get In
Wait - that would mean that if you get in then you absolutely did NOT wait, when all we really wanted to say was that waiting wasn't necessary. Your illustration makes this error - you went from NOT (A
B) (which means A is not sufficient for B; A occurring tells you nothing about whether B occurs) to A
B (which means A is sufficient for B not occurring). Important difference!
In short, denying that a conditional relationship exists is not the same as claiming that the opposite relationship does exist.
Back to Nikki's example, now. His original claim was you have to wait to get in unless you have a special pass. Breaking that into its component parts, there is a necessary condition introduced by the word "unless", and that necessary condition is having a pass. The sufficient condition, following the Unless Equation, is the negation of the other condition in the relationship. In this case, that other condition was, itself, a conditional claim: you have to wait to get it, or Get In
Wait. The negation of that claim is "it's not true that you have to wait to get in" or "NOT (Get In
Wait). Putting that all together, we get the nested approach:
NOT (Get In
Wait)
Special Pass
The contrapositive would be:
Special Pass (Get In
Wait)
Now, how did we get to a necessary condition of Wait OR Special Pass? It might help to take a holistic approach to the meaning of all these rules. What would we know if you get in? Well, either there is that conditional of having to wait, or else, if that rule does NOT apply, then you have to have had a special pass. Either waiting is required or, if it isn't (triggering the first nested conditional claim above), then you have to have that Pass. Getting in requires at least one of the two, waiting of having a pass. Makes sense in the real world, and it also mechanically follows the rules. We could, if we like, redo the diagram as Nikki did:
Get In
Wait OR Special Pass
Let us know if that doesn't clear it up!
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
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