I just have one specific question. On parallel reasoning questions, if an answer choice essentially has the same logical force, # terms, and structure as the stimulus except its conclusion is the contrapositive of the previous terms, does that disqualify it as a right answer?

For instance:

Stimulus:

A --> B;

B --> C;

Thus, A --> C

Answer choice:

D --> E

E --> F

Thus, F --> D?

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2 comments

  • Saturday, Jul 30 2022

    Thank you so much for the tip!

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  • Friday, Jul 29 2022

    No it does not because the logical structure is the same. So it would be correct. However, if you have an answer choice that had the correct D->F you would have to pick that AC. But, the lsat wouldnt do that because there cant be two correct AC's.

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