i would like some understanding for the strengthening/weakening question types. if an answer choice contain "some/most/many/few" or similar, should i presume that the answer choice would be more likely wrong than right? i was thinking it would lean towards being wrong because since those are not "all" or "none", they allow for outliers.
also, if the conclusion of the stimulus explicitly says "All x..." or "No y..." would "some/most/many/few/etc." answer choices lean more towards being right than wrong?
any help would be appreciated!
Comments
The observation that "some/most/many/few" neglects outliers like "all" isn't even true. "Some/most/many" can include "all." Remember the lesson where JY pointed out that "some" and "many" is relatively subjective. However, we know at the very least that "some" and "many" mean "at least one," but it's still possible for it to include "all."
Get a grip on the fundamental rules of logic and avoid trying to exploit some perceived quirks of the test. You're not after exploiting tendencies of the test, like strengthening/weakening answer choices being wrong by virtue of using the words "some/most/many/few." You're after exposing invalid reasoning. Yes, strengthening/weakening questions have peculiar faults that other question types may not be prone to commit, by virtue of their construction, which may justify your use of applying a model or shortcut approach to the question types. But, your focus is still on what makes an argument, whether under the strengthening/weakening question type, or otherwise, conclusively valid or invalid.
In the example above, the reason I could cross off an answer choice that says "X dogs has fur" when I was supposed to weaken the statement "not all dogs have fur" was because I understood that "some" is not logically adequate to refute "not all" more so than because I saw the word "some" in a weakening question type. This conclusion is by virtue of the logic, not necessarily because the word "some" was included in a strengthening/weakening question type. Your conclusion about seeing the words "some/most/many/few" as either categorically right or wrong is too broad and ignorant of the logic and all its nuances.
Eventually you'll be so good that you'll get to the point of seeing a "not all" conclusion, a "weakening" question type, and a "some" answer choice as an automatic wrong answer, but this arises from your mastery of the fundamental logic more so than any mental shortcut you have to memorize.