A student recently sent me this question:
I tried to diagram it using conditional logic like we did last class,
but am not sure if I'm doing it right. Here's the question:
22)
No chordates are tracheophytes, and all members of Pteropsida are
tracheophytes. [ C--> -T, P-->T ]
So no members of Pteropsida belong to the family Hominidae. [ P--> -H]
The conclusion above follows logically if which one of the following is assumed?
(A) All members of the Homimidae family are tracheophytes
(B) All members of the Hominidae family are chordates
(C) All tracheophytes are members of Pteropsida
(D) No members of the Hominidae family are chordates
(E) No chordates are members of Pteropsida
I wanted to hook together the first two statements and got: C--> -T --> -P
Not sure at this point what to do with the P--> -H statement. The
contrapositive doesnt seem to fit into the first statement H--> -P.
I ended up choosing (D) over the correct answer, (B).
Did I diagram this incorrectly?
Here's my response:
No you didn't diagram this incorrectly at all - I checked your diagramming above and it is spot on. The only thing I might have recommended is also putting in your contrapositives so you remember those possibilities as well.
Incorrect answer (D) gives you H -> -C or C-> -H. If you link that with what you have above, it will just give you C-> -T and -H. But this doesn't help us connect up P and T.
I'd point you to the way you can link things up just based on your premises already: [ C--> -T, P-->T ] If you redo these with the contrapositive, you'll see that you already know C-> -T -> -P and P -> T -> -C. So I'd say what we are really looking for to get P-> -H I think we should be looking for -C -> -H or H -> C, which is precisely what B is.
I hope that helps! Good luck with the February LSAT to those who are taking it!