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PT 20 S4 Q15
Posted: Tue Jun 28, 2016 12:37 pm
by New_Spice180
This is an interesting question! I actually answered this correctly and I thought I had it but when I saw the explanations they're saying it's a A(Ronda goes)> B(Paul goes)> C (Ted goes) that strikes me as strange! I saw unless, so I negated the sufficient and got (Ted doesn't go)>(Paul won't go) therefore Ronda won't go, which led me to the correct answer choice. My problem is that the A>B>C relationship, doesn't that essentially say B (Paul going) is sufficient for Ted to go, which isn't what the stimulus is saying? I'm lost, HELP!
Re: PT 20 S4 Q15
Posted: Wed Jul 06, 2016 2:04 pm
by Blueprint Mithun
New_Spice180 wrote:This is an interesting question! I actually answered this correctly and I thought I had it but when I saw the explanations they're saying it's a A(Ronda goes)> B(Paul goes)> C (Ted goes) that strikes me as strange! I saw unless, so I negated the sufficient and got (Ted doesn't go)>(Paul won't go) therefore Ronda won't go, which led me to the correct answer choice. My problem is that the A>B>C relationship, doesn't that essentially say B (Paul going) is sufficient for Ted to go, which isn't what the stimulus is saying? I'm lost, HELP!
No, that is what the stimulus is saying, albeit in a different order. Like you said, if Ted doesn't go, then Paul won't go. The contrapositive of this is that if Paul goes, then Ted goes. Paul going is contingent on Ted going, thus Ted going is the necessary condition for Paul going. Ted HAS to go for Paul to go - therefore, if Paul is going, then Ted is definitely going well.