I thought I had a good handle on quantifiers until now lol I can't understand how C and D in structure are different, so I was stuck between the two. Help would be appreciated on this question.
... the same for everyone (not universal), it doesn't prove ... factual evidence rather than a universal generalization.
For C, ... just says that not being universal does not reject the ... if the correlation is not "universal", the correlation still exists ...
I have an extension on my browser called DarkReader which basically turns every white color to black to minimize eye strain. It basically acts as a universal "dark mode". Would the proctors allow me to use this?
... am currently studying existential quantifiers and although I understand ... MBF questions with existential quantifiers, but was wondering ... require us to use existential quantifiers?
... us to utilize existential quantifiers? I would greatly ...
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I interpreted C as Universal feature + not invention -> ... />
/innate ability -> /universal feature or /not invention universal feature or /not invention, and ... since it is a universal feature, can conclude /not ...
From my memory, I think the correct answer is A.
As for your question regarding contrapositive, watch out for quantifiers such as some and most.
Remember what the lessons taught you: there are NO contrapositives for quantified statements.
... forms have both existential and universal statements. For example look at ... the existential statements, and the universal statements are the arrows which ...
... negating the necessary, existential before universal serial argument strings
... necessary, negating the sufficient, universal before existential serial argument strings ... the existential are before the universal qualifiers).
Interestingly, of ...
The valid argument forms and the existential quantifiers can appear anywhere on the LSAT, not only in particular types of questions. Sure, they may appear more frequently in certain types of questions, but it's not a hard and fast rule.
No, the modifiers/quantifiers are important. Are you paying attention to their synonymous interpretations? Majority=Most, some=a few=many=several, likely=most of the time, etc.