Subscription pricing
Hi guys so I have noticed while going through the SA and PSA questions that the answer choice must have the conclusion in the necessary condition. This is very important for me as I often miss answers because of this. Can anyone expand on the theory and understanding behind this and why it occurs. That would help me out a lot. Thanks in advance :)
1
3 comments
@quinnxzhang542 => This is correct!
Don't ever assume on the LSAT that something like a conclusion has to be in an answer choices as true. It does not have to include a conclusion for assumption questions. It can be premises, a random fact, something that makes the conclusion valid.
I have noticed while going through the SA and PSA questions that the answer choice must have the conclusion in the necessary condition.
This isn't true. I semi-randomly looked at three recent SA questions -- 77.4.24, 77.4.20, and 76.2.22 -- and none of the correct answer choices even mentioned the conclusions of the arguments.
From my understanding, it is because we are trying to reach the conclusion from the premises.
In the curriculum, j.y teaches the formula, P->C, if premise, then conclusion. Our task for SA and PSA assumption is to guarantee the argument, and we do that by showing that the premises lead to the conclusion.