Thirteen logical reasoning question types
Weaken
ask you to attack or undermine the author's argument. ex. "Which one of the following, if true, most seriously weakens the argument?"
Flaw in the Reasoning
ask you to describe, in abstract terms, the error of reasoning committed by the author. ex. "the reasoning in the astronomer's argument is flawed because of this argument."
Method of reasoning
ask you to describe, in abstract terms, the way in which the author made his or her argument. ex. "which one of the following describes the technique of the reasoning used above."
Assumption
ask you to identify an assumption of the author's argument. ex. "Which one of the following is an assumption required by the argument above?"
Cannot Be True
ask you to identify the answer choice that cannot be true or is most weakened based on the info in the stimulus. ex. "if the statements above are true, which one of the following cannot be true?"
Parallel Reasoning
ask you to identify the answer choice that contains reasoning most similar in structure to the reasoning presented in the stimulus. ex. "Which one of the following arguments is most similar in its pattern of reasoning to the argument above?"
Must Be true/ most supported
ask you to identify the answer choice that is best proven by the info in the stimulus. ex. "if the statements above are true, which one of the following must also be true?"
Strengthen/support
ask you to select the answer choice that provides support for the author's argument or strengthens it in some way. ex. "which one of the following, if true, most strengthens the argument?
Justify the Conclusion
ask you to supply a piece of info that, when added to the premises, proves the conclusion. ex. "Which one of the following, if assumed, allows the conclusion above to be properly drawn?"
Point at issue
require you to identify a point of contention between two speakers, and thus these questions appear almost exclusively with two-speaker stimuli. ex. "Larson and Manuela disagree about whether."
Resolve the paradox
stimulus contains a discrepancy or seeming contradiction. Find the answer choice that best resolves the situation. ex. "which one of the following, if true, would most effectively resolve the apparent paradox above?"
Main point
variant of must be true questions. asks you to find the primary conclusion made by the author. ex. "the main point of the argument is that"
Evaluate the Argument
you must decide which answer choice will allow you to determine the logical validity of the argument. ex. "the answer to which one of the following questions would contribute most to an evaluation of the argument?"