Logical Reasoning Inference & Resolution: Proving What Follows and Fixing What Conflicts

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Last updated 2:37 PM on 3/28/26
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30 Terms

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Must Be True (MBT)

A question type that asks for a statement that logically follows from the stimulus; it must be true if the stimulus is true.

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Most Strongly Supported (MSS)

A question type that asks for the answer that is best supported by the stimulus, even if not definitively proven.

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Cannot Be True (CBT)

A question type that asks for the statement that is incompatible with the stimulus; it cannot be true if the stimulus is true.

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Resolve the Paradox

A question type that presents seemingly contradictory statements; the goal is to find an answer that reconciles the two.

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Core Logical Reasoning Skill

The ability to draw valid inferences from given information while avoiding assumptions.

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Linking Opportunities

Combining statements to create inferences, such as connecting general rules with specific cases.

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Quantifiers

Words like 'all,' 'some,' 'most,' and 'only' that affect the strength and scope of claims.

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Inference Move

Basic reasoning steps used in logical deduction, such as conditional reasoning and quantifier interpretation.

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Denial Test

A method to determine if a candidate answer could still be true if the stimulus is true.

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Conditional Reasoning

Logic involving 'if-then' statements, including contrapositive inferences.

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Causal Leaps

Incorrect assumptions made in reasoning that imply causation from mere correlation.

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Support Relationship

The connection showing how an answer is backed by the evidence provided in the stimulus.

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Different Groups / Selection Effect

A common resolution pattern where two facts apply to different subsets of a group.

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Different Time Frames

A resolution pattern where one statement applies before and the other after a change.

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Hidden Third Variable

An unseen factor that helps explain the apparent contradiction between two statements.

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Rate vs Total

A distinction that can clarify paradoxes, involving comparison of rates (per unit) and totals (overall).

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Contradiction Spotting

Identifying direct conflicts between statements to determine if an answer is CBT.

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Chaining Conditionals

Linking multiple conditional statements to derive further implications.

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Resolution Explanation

The reasoning that allows two seemingly contradictory statements to coexist.

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Contrapositive

A valid inference derived from a conditional statement, switching and negating both terms.

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Overstrength Language

Using terms like ‘all’ or ‘never’ that make a claim too strong beyond what the stimulus supports.

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Comparative Support

Evaluating answers against each other to determine which has the strongest backing from the stimulus.

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Misleading Comparisons

Incorrectly interpreting data due to failure to recognize differences in measures or definitions.

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Expectation Effects

When expectations lead to perceptions that may contradict evidence, often seen in paradoxes.

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Inference Types

Categories of inferences such as MBT, MSS, CBT, each representing different logical evaluation tasks.

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Stimulus Analysis

The process of dissecting the stimulus to identify key statements and potential inferences.

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Weaknesses in Reasoning

Common mistakes made in logical reasoning, like overgeneralization or misinterpretation.

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Answer Choice Evaluation

The process of critically assessing each answer option against the stimulus and logical reasoning.

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Logical Consistency

The required alignment between claims made in the stimulus and the correct answer choice.

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Fact vs Conclusion

The distinction between what is stated (facts) and what is inferred or deduced (conclusions).

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