Logical Reasoning: Drawing and Testing Conclusions on the LSAT

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27 Terms

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Must Be True (MBT)

A question type that asks for a statement logically forced by the stimulus, guaranteed to be true if the stimulus is true.

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Valid inference

The skill of deducing conclusions that are logically consistent with given premises or statements.

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Quantifier examples

Terms such as 'all,' 'some,' 'most,' and 'none' that define the scope of statements in logical reasoning.

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Conditional statements

Statements that express a relationship where one condition leads to the fulfillment of another (e.g., 'If A, then B').

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Contrapositive

An equivalent statement derived from a conditional statement, where the antecedent and consequent are negated and switched.

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Safe inferences

Logical conclusions that can be confidently drawn from given premises, often involving restatements or combined facts.

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Denial testing

A technique used in logical reasoning to determine if an answer choice is necessarily false by imagining a scenario where it could be false.

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Common wrong moves in MBT

Errors like affirming the consequent or denying the antecedent that lead to invalid conclusions.

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Most Strongly Supported (MSS)

A question type that asks for the answer choice best supported by the stimulus, without requiring it to be 100% guaranteed.

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Modest wording

Language that reflects caution or likelihood, often using terms like 'some,' 'likely,' or 'tends' in MSS answers.

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Resolution mindset

The thought process used to tackle 'Resolve the Paradox' questions by identifying the specific tension in conflicting statements.

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Different groups resolution

Recognizing that paradoxical statements may refer to different populations or subsets, providing clarity between them.

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Net effect resolution

Identifying that two opposing influences can coexist, where one effect suppresses or counteracts the other.

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Cannot Be True (CBT)

A question type that asks for a statement that must be false if the stimulus is accepted as true.

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Direct contradiction

A type of CBT answer that states the opposite of a fact presented in the stimulus.

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Testing answers in CBT

Evaluating answer choices by checking if they can logically coexist with the stimulus; if they can't, they are correct.

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Resolve the Paradox

A reasoning task that presents seemingly incompatible statements and requires identifying new information to reconcile them.

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Confounding variable

An outside factor that alters the relationship between two variables, often revealing the true nature of the data presented.

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Timing shifts resolution

An explanation that clarifies inconsistencies by indicating that facts were relevant at different times.

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Different definitions resolution

Clarifying that the same term is used with different meanings in contradictory statements.

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Common resolution traps

Mistakes made when selecting answers that do not directly address the tension or contradiction presented in the stimulus.

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Scope shift

A common error where an answer discusses a different group, timeline, or context than the stimulus supports.

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Collectively exhaustive reasoning

The reasoning approach that ensures all possibilities are accounted for in resolving paradoxes or contradictions.

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Logical reasoning skill

The ability to analyze arguments and determine their validity, often tested through various question types on exams like the LSAT.

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Strengthen/Weaken reasoning

Analytical strategies used to assess how well facts or arguments support or detract from a specific conclusion.

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Facts vs. assumptions

Recognizing the difference between what is stated in the stimulus (facts) and what must be inferred or assumed.

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Common patterns in logical reasoning

Recurring themes in LSAT questions, such as distinguishing between MBT, MSS, CBT, and Resolve the Paradox types.