Lecture Note
University
University of PittsburghCourse
LSAC0000 | Introduction to the LSATPages
1
Academic year
2023
mns81
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p {margin: 0; padding: 0;} .ft00{font-size:22px;font-family:Calibri;color:#000000;} .ft01{font-size:22px;font-family:Calibri;color:#000000;} .ft02{font-size:22px;font-family:CourierNewPSMT;color:#000000;} .ft03{font-size:28px;font-family:TimesNewRomanPS;color:#000000;} .ft04{font-size:22px;line-height:27px;font-family:Calibri;color:#000000;} • Read closely and know precisely what the author says. Do not generalize! • There are words that should be noted when they appear, regardless of whether they appear in the premises or conclusion. Quantity Indicators : • Refer to the amount of quantity in the relationship ○ Example: Some People, many of the laws Probability Indicators: • Refer to the likelihood of occurrence or the obligation present. ○ Example: The Mayor should resign, the law will never pass Quantity Indicators Probability Indicators All Must Every Will Most Always Many Not always Some Probably Several Likely Few Would Sole Not necessarily Only Could Not all Rarely None never Quantity and Probability Indicators
Logical Reasoning: Quantity and Probability Indicators
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