Okay, So I have watched all of JY Videos on Parallel Flaw but keep missing the correct answer. I feel like my challenge has been correct diagraming ? But when I get that right, its something else
Do any of you guys have advice when it comes to approaching these questions? Any steps that should be followed? Where can I do more parallel flaw questions and learn more about these little monsters .
Comments
Perhaps a review of JY's logic lessons would firm up your skillset?
These are some of the shortcuts to use so that you don't have to map them all out. Usually only 1 or 2 even have a shot of being correct after a quick initial glance over.
DO NOT start diagramming right away, superficially run through each answer choice first and eliminate as many as you can with the short cuts above. Then only spend time diagramming the ones that even have a shot.
Also, I wouldn't immediately skip all parallel reasoning questions. A lot of the time these go faster than other questions because the argument structures are so simple. Some are as simple as the contrapositive of A-->B.
Here is a great example of using shortcuts on a more challenging parallel flaw question. DO NOT CONTINUE READING IF YOU DO NOT WANT TO SPOIL PT 48!!!!
The stimulus conclusion is basically "this entity X cannot be explained by this other entity Y"
only the conclusions of answer choices A and E match this form.
Answer choice B just says "entity X cannot be explained"
Answer choice C just says "entity X 'has nothing to do with' entity Y" (having nothing to do with something is different than not being able to be explained by something)
Answer choice D just says "none of the explanations for entity X is likely to be correct" (notice how not only does the form not match but the level of certainty doesn't match either due to the word "likely"
So really you only need to spend time on A and E which are both close because they both have conclusions that say something cannot be explained by something else, A just gets the two something's in the wrong order.
Sorry, my response was unclear as @alexroark5 pointed out. Of course you should eliminate obvious mismatches first before confirming (or eliminating a remaining contender); would never recommend mapping out every answer choice and can't even imagine doing so except perhaps on the most bizarre or most difficult of these question types. You can consider that as the required assumption for my flawed response that's what happens when I have just gotten home following a rather harrowing commute. My comments apply only to the final comparison of contenders against the stimulus.
One thing that helped a lot was BR and painstakingly translating into Lawgic or mapping out every single answer choice.
[Edit]
Lesson citation:
http://7sage.com/lesson/7-common-invalid-argument-forms/
Another question
Principle
JY had few brief short videos on these. So I feel like I still do not have a better grasp . He did mention something like
ex 1:
A
A---> B
---------------------
B
ex 2:
Not B
A--->B
---------------
Not A
He said one tactic would be to look for conclusion that satisfies the necessary condition OR look for conclusion that deny sufficient .
So when it comes down to answer choices, (A, B, C, D etc..)
Are we suppose to see if the conclusion satisfies the stimulus necessary condition ??