- Sun Feb 21, 2016 12:00 am
#33151
Complete Question Explanation
Must Be True—FL. The correct answer choice is (E)
Formal Logic, a minor concept on the LSAT, makes an appearance in this question, using terms like “most” and “some.” However, the answer to this question is derived by application of conditional reasoning ideas that are contained within the umbrella of Formal Logic, and with which you likely are more familiar.
The editor discusses the types of books considered and/or published by the publishing house. The editor treats fiction and non-fiction works separately. Regarding fiction books, the editor says that most of the books of fiction they, meaning the publishing house, has published were submitted by literary agents. The rest of the published books of fiction were received directly from fiction writers from whom the publishing house requested submissions. We can use the word “some” to diagram this remainder.
As to nonfiction manuscripts, the editor provides an absolute rule: no nonfiction manuscript is given serious attention, let alone published, unless it is from a renowned figure or the publishing house has requested the manuscript after careful review of the writer’s book proposal. Although this is a complicated rule, with compound sufficient and necessary terms and the term “unless,” the use of the Unless Equation will make it more manageable.
To review, the facts in stimulus were:
Answer choice (A): This answer choice is incorrect because it relies on knowing the number of unrequested manuscripts the publishing house has received from renowned figures, a number not provided in the stimulus.
Answer choice (B): As with answer choice (A), this answer choice relies on knowing numbers not available in the stimulus. The remaining category of book is a nonfiction manuscript requested by the publishing house after careful review of the writer’s proposal. The number of these manuscripts requested by the publishing house is unknown, as are any other numbers detailing how many books of each type the publishing house publishes. Without these numbers, the comparison made in this answer choice, as with that in answer choice (A), is not supported by the stimulus.
Answer choice (C): This answer choice fails to include those nonfiction manuscripts requested by the publishing house after careful review of the writer’s book proposal.
Answer choice (D): The editor did not draw this distinction between books of fiction submitted by literary agents for writers they represent and books of fiction received directly from fiction writers from whom the publishing house requested submissions.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. According to the stimulus, an unrequested manuscript not submitted by a literary agent must be a nonfiction manuscript. The conditional relationship created by the third fact described above provided that if a nonfiction manuscript is given serious attention, then it must be the case that it was from a renowned public figure or was requested by the publishing house after careful review of the writer’s book proposal. Since this answer choice refers to unrequested manuscripts not submitted by literary agents that the publishing house has published, it must be the case that the manuscripts were written by renowned figures.
Must Be True—FL. The correct answer choice is (E)
Formal Logic, a minor concept on the LSAT, makes an appearance in this question, using terms like “most” and “some.” However, the answer to this question is derived by application of conditional reasoning ideas that are contained within the umbrella of Formal Logic, and with which you likely are more familiar.
The editor discusses the types of books considered and/or published by the publishing house. The editor treats fiction and non-fiction works separately. Regarding fiction books, the editor says that most of the books of fiction they, meaning the publishing house, has published were submitted by literary agents. The rest of the published books of fiction were received directly from fiction writers from whom the publishing house requested submissions. We can use the word “some” to diagram this remainder.
As to nonfiction manuscripts, the editor provides an absolute rule: no nonfiction manuscript is given serious attention, let alone published, unless it is from a renowned figure or the publishing house has requested the manuscript after careful review of the writer’s book proposal. Although this is a complicated rule, with compound sufficient and necessary terms and the term “unless,” the use of the Unless Equation will make it more manageable.
To review, the facts in stimulus were:
- Fact: most of the books of fiction we have published were submitted by literary agents for writers they represented
books of fiction published submitted by literary agents for writers they represent
Fact: the rest were received directly from fiction writers from whom we requested submissions
books of fiction published received directly from writers from whom we requested submissions
Fact: no nonfiction manuscript has been given serious attention, let alone published, unless it was from a renowned figure or we had requested the manuscript after careful review of the writer’s book proposal
nonfiction manuscript given serious attention author is a renowned public figure
or or
nonfiction manuscript published we requested the manuscript after careful review of the writer’s book proposal
Answer choice (A): This answer choice is incorrect because it relies on knowing the number of unrequested manuscripts the publishing house has received from renowned figures, a number not provided in the stimulus.
Answer choice (B): As with answer choice (A), this answer choice relies on knowing numbers not available in the stimulus. The remaining category of book is a nonfiction manuscript requested by the publishing house after careful review of the writer’s proposal. The number of these manuscripts requested by the publishing house is unknown, as are any other numbers detailing how many books of each type the publishing house publishes. Without these numbers, the comparison made in this answer choice, as with that in answer choice (A), is not supported by the stimulus.
Answer choice (C): This answer choice fails to include those nonfiction manuscripts requested by the publishing house after careful review of the writer’s book proposal.
Answer choice (D): The editor did not draw this distinction between books of fiction submitted by literary agents for writers they represent and books of fiction received directly from fiction writers from whom the publishing house requested submissions.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. According to the stimulus, an unrequested manuscript not submitted by a literary agent must be a nonfiction manuscript. The conditional relationship created by the third fact described above provided that if a nonfiction manuscript is given serious attention, then it must be the case that it was from a renowned public figure or was requested by the publishing house after careful review of the writer’s book proposal. Since this answer choice refers to unrequested manuscripts not submitted by literary agents that the publishing house has published, it must be the case that the manuscripts were written by renowned figures.