Saturday, March 10, 2012

"Un"-Conditional "Love" | Sufficient Necessary Relationships

The LSAT tests you on three things, and the language of logic is one of them. While this doesn't mean you have to be an expert logician (who holds a Ph.D in advanced philosophy), it does means you must become (at the very least) fluent in basic and fundamental logic.

Many folks get pissed about this ("What the heck does logic have to do with law practice?!"). But before getting pissy, calm down and consider how great lawyers can masterfully craft bullet proof arguments that have no logical holes in them. This doesn't happen just magically overnight.

Here's the first logical concept you ought to learn in your quest to achieve a higher LSAT score - Conditional Statements.

If....then.

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