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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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Thank you so much for the tip!
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.