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Errata list - Manhattan LSAT 2nd edition LOGICAL REASONING

by noah Wed Feb 23, 2011 1:00 pm

Hi everyone, I am re-posting Mike's post below so that it's the first one you see when you get here!

Here is the running list of all the typos, formatting issues, etc. in the first print of this 2nd edition book.

Almost all of the issues are very minor -- there are very few that you actually need to be concerned with, and we've listed them in bold at the front of the list.

HUGE thanks to rippinradio for his brilliant editing eye and his attention to detail.

Please write in if you see anything else we've missed. We'll keep updating this list as need be, and of course we'll polish everything up for the next printing.

Finally, a big thank you to everyone for all the positive feedback we've been getting on this book! We put a lot of blood and sweat into it, and it's great to hear from so many people that they are finding it to be useful.

Here's the errata list:

Logical Reasoning

Substantive Issues:
"¢ Pg. 233 (middle) : argument core diagram contains a conclusion from a previous (gene variant) question
"¢ Pg. 297 (first column top) : argument core diagram contains a conclusion from a previous question
"¢ Pg. 309(#10): This is actually a biconditional → S → - V, - V → S, V → - S, -S → V
"¢ Pg. 364: #4: The correct answer is (C)
"¢ Pg. 547(bottom): "Draw a Conclusion" should be "Identify the Conclusion"


Other smaller issues:
"¢ Pg. 33 (middle): destroys the fever’s ability may be too strong
"¢ Pg. 52 (near bottom): we’ll look for (the) answer that would
"¢ Pg. 53 (near top): and (that) might possibly explain
"¢ Pg. 66 (near top): that you’ve got (a) strong (,) intuitive sense of logic
"¢ Pg. 75 (near bottom): If Sally is (a) child
"¢ Pg. 115 (second column middle): no(t) the only thing the doctor prescribes
"¢ Pg. 119 (first column middle): (r)eplacement wetlands will be built
"¢ Pg. 123 (second column top): a general education (system) is put in place?
"¢ Pg. 125 (second column bottom): people many not choose this otherwise
"¢ Pg. 125: Shouldn’t the argument be diagrammed as P → SC → C? If the core is P → C, then the assumptions are strengthening a premise.
The words "it follows that" indicate the forthcoming subconclusion:
effective remedy (P) + most people want to get better (P) → almost everyone use it (SC)
"¢ Pg. 139 (two-thirds down): match those of his other work(s)
"¢ Pg. 168 (second column bottom): We have not way of knowing
"¢ Pg. 172(second column in answer A): insurance companies have the night to charge
"¢ Pg. 174 (first column bottom): which we much assume is true because it
"¢ Pg. 175 (second column top): that (the) "morale of her nation was at an especially low point."
"¢ Pg. 176 (second column bottom): extra (A) and extra (B) under PT18, S4, Q9
"¢ Pg. 177 (first column) spacing
"¢ Pg. 195(top third): For a necessary but sufficient assumption _ should be "for a necessary assumption,"
"¢ Pg. 199(middle): This is an issue that we anticipated . (spacing)
"¢ Pg. 204 (top): for the argument to be true. ("true" should be replaced with "valid")
"¢ Pg. 215(weaken answer example): and ends up becoming worse cooks
"¢ Pg. 215(towards bottom) : doesn’t have to make the ar gument perfect
"¢ Pg. 216(middle): to these questions canwill relate _ should be "will"
"¢ Pg. 224 (top third): (D) seemslooks like the correct answer
"¢ Pg. 224 (middle): DNA as proof. an(d) obviously If we were just
"¢ Pg. 235(core image): fossils in northern ar(c)tic
"¢ Pg. 236 (middle): the two sentences starting with "However" under choice B seem to be duplicates
"¢ Pg. 246 (bottom): (F) should be (C)
"¢ Pg. 253(pt29, s4,q11): may include the user of language
"¢ Pg. 255(bottom first column): (C) is less a efficient fuel
"¢ Pg. 268(pt20,s1, q5): (C) of the first problem has an extra space in front of the text
"¢ Pg. 297 conclusion for PT28, S3, Q18 should be "Evaluate individual’s ability to make aesthetic judgments in terms of how much they promote survival" not "He shares the blame with contractors"
Pg. 314(top): If A, then B.. Make an assumption explicit
"¢ Pg. 314(middle): Let’s (apostrophe is not curled)
"¢ Pg. 321(top) : Since either _O, or _FRI, by itself, guarantees"”TGA
"¢ Pg. 321(2/3 down italics): Because is it -FRI
"¢ Pg. 322(bottom): If Marcus wears a Jacket
"¢ Pg. 351 (bottom): in (B), the apostrophes are not curled
"¢ Pg. 358 (bottom): Think about is.
"¢ Pg. 363 (question 8): Some children are at once happy, healhty, and smart.
"¢ Pg. 372(left column middle): ( followed by a return, before "-profit"
"¢ Pg. 390: PT 42, S2, Q21, choice (E) should say "call (a) psychotherapist"
"¢ Pg. 396(2nd column middle): which does jibe somewhat
"¢ Pg. 398(1st column middle): "is not to evaluate the argument, it’s to"
"¢ Pg. 407(top): Take answer \(A) as an example.
"¢ Pg. 408 (claim 2): "When free to use their own judgment, judges invariably" ("judges" better if "people")
"¢ Pg. 415(pt32, s3,q19): should be "PT33, S3, Q19"
"¢ Pg. 422(pt18, s4,q2): less than I percent of the city’s deficit
"¢ Pg. 430(1st column top): The attacks the latter ("The" should be "She")
"¢ Pg. 430 (2nd column bottom): so (it’s) not a viable candidate for the conclusion
"¢ Pg. 434(2nd column middle): Juan thinks that the presence (of) professional athletes
"¢ Pg. 466: PT37, S4, Q6: the apostrophes are not curled
"¢ Pg. 474(1st column bottom): (for food/ for warmth)
"¢ Pg. 475: PT37, S4, Q6: the apostrophes are not curled
"¢ Pg. 502(middle): "always us(e) language literally"
"¢ Pg. 515(1st column bottom): un-used
"¢ Pg. 518(2nd column top): (A) has an extra space following it
"¢ Pg. 523(2nd column 1/3 down): it fails to prove sufficient evidence (should be provide)
"¢ Pg. 533: duplicate paragraphs in the middle of the page
"¢ Pg. 544(bottom): In the discussion of (B), the detail creep actually makes this choice correct. Perhaps, "irrelevant" might be a better word.
 
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Re: Errata list - Manhattan LSAT 2nd edition

by tommyid1 Mon Mar 14, 2011 1:30 am

Logical Reasoning Guide

On pg. 445, the analysis of choice (B) says that it is false. However, isn't it possible for it to be true?

Using the given example, let's imagine 5 voters.

Imagine 3 prefer A and 2 prefer B.

Out of those who prefer A, one finds school budgeting to be the most important issue. The other two are concerned with crime.

Out of those who prefer B, both find school budgeting to be the most important issue, but no one is concerned with crime.

This is a possible scenario in which at least some voters who prefer B do not share at least one common concern with at least one voter who prefers A.

Correct?
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Re: Errata list - Manhattan LSAT 2nd edition

by ManhattanPrepLSAT2 Tue Mar 15, 2011 2:33 pm

Hi - thanks for your question! --

(B) is a challenging answer choice, and I think I understand how you are thinking about it. I think the key is to interpret the wording exactly.

What it states is "At least some voters who prefer Candidate B do not share at least one common concern with at least one voter who prefers Candidate A."

In your example, you had two people in group (B) - let's think about them one at a time:

Person 1: Do we know for sure person 1 shares a common concern with at least one person who prefers Candidate A?

Yes we do -- she shares the common concern of school budgeting with one person who prefers Candidate A.

Person 2: Do we know for sure? Yes we do, for the same reasons.

So, in your example, both people in group B DO share at least one issue in common with someone in group A -- which leads answer (B) to be false.

Now, if (B) were worded slightly differently -- if it was worded either "At least some voters who prefer A don't share a common concern with voters who prefer B" or "At least some voters who prefer B don't share a common concern with ALL of the voters who prefer A" the answer would be very different.

Hope that is helpful in clarifying. Please let us know if it isn't, and I'll be happy to discuss further!
 
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Re: Errata list - Manhattan LSAT 2nd edition

by tommyid1 Thu Mar 17, 2011 10:54 pm

Right, I see what the statement is saying now.Thank you very much for the response! I appreciate this board; you guys rock.
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Re: Errata list - Manhattan LSAT 2nd edition

by ManhattanPrepLSAT2 Fri Mar 18, 2011 2:02 am

Hi all -- the correct answer for #4 on PG. 364 should be (C) NONE OF THE ABOVE, and it is incorrectly labeled as (B).

Sorry everyone! We'll get that fixed up.
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Re: Errata list - Manhattan LSAT 2nd edition LOGICAL REASONING

by ManhattanPrepLSAT2 Wed Mar 23, 2011 4:06 pm

Hi everyone,

Here is the running list of all the typos, formatting issues, etc. in the first print of this 2nd edition book.

Almost all of the issues are very minor -- there are very few that you actually need to be concerned with, and we've listed them in bold at the front of the list.

HUGE thanks to rippinradio for his brilliant editing eye and his attention to detail.

Please write in if you see anything else we've missed. We'll keep updating this list as need be, and of course we'll polish everything up for the next printing.

Finally, a big thank you to everyone for all the positive feedback we've been getting on this book! We put a lot of blood and sweat into it, and it's great to hear from so many people that they are finding it to be useful.

Here's the errata list:

Logical Reasoning
Substantive Issues:
"¢ Pg. 233 (middle) : argument core diagram contains a conclusion from a previous (gene variant) question
"¢ Pg. 297 (first column top) : argument core diagram contains a conclusion from a previous question
"¢ Pg. 309(#10): This is actually a biconditional → S → - V, - V → S, V → - S, -S → V
"¢ Pg. 364: #4: The correct answer is (C)
"¢ Pg. 547(bottom): "Draw a Conclusion" should be "Identify the Conclusion"


Other smaller issues:
"¢ Pg. 33 (middle): destroys the fever’s ability may be too strong
"¢ Pg. 52 (near bottom): we’ll look for (the) answer that would
"¢ Pg. 53 (near top): and (that) might possibly explain
"¢ Pg. 66 (near top): that you’ve got (a) strong (,) intuitive sense of logic
"¢ Pg. 75 (near bottom): If Sally is (a) child
"¢ Pg. 115 (second column middle): no(t) the only thing the doctor prescribes
"¢ Pg. 119 (first column middle): (r)eplacement wetlands will be built
"¢ Pg. 123 (second column top): a general education (system) is put in place?
"¢ Pg. 125 (second column bottom): people many not choose this otherwise
"¢ Pg. 125: Shouldn’t the argument be diagrammed as P → SC → C? If the core is P → C, then the assumptions are strengthening a premise.
The words "it follows that" indicate the forthcoming subconclusion:
effective remedy (P) + most people want to get better (P) → almost everyone use it (SC)
"¢ Pg. 139 (two-thirds down): match those of his other work(s)
"¢ Pg. 168 (second column bottom): We have not way of knowing
"¢ Pg. 172(second column in answer A): insurance companies have the night to charge
"¢ Pg. 174 (first column bottom): which we much assume is true because it
"¢ Pg. 175 (second column top): that (the) "morale of her nation was at an especially low point."
"¢ Pg. 176 (second column bottom): extra (A) and extra (B) under PT18, S4, Q9
"¢ Pg. 177 (first column) spacing
"¢ Pg. 195(top third): For a necessary but sufficient assumption _ should be "for a necessary assumption,"
"¢ Pg. 199(middle): This is an issue that we anticipated . (spacing)
"¢ Pg. 204 (top): for the argument to be true. ("true" should be replaced with "valid")
"¢ Pg. 215(weaken answer example): and ends up becoming worse cooks
"¢ Pg. 215(towards bottom) : doesn’t have to make the ar gument perfect
"¢ Pg. 216(middle): to these questions canwill relate _ should be "will"
"¢ Pg. 224 (top third): (D) seemslooks like the correct answer
"¢ Pg. 224 (middle): DNA as proof. an(d) obviously If we were just
"¢ Pg. 235(core image): fossils in northern ar(c)tic
"¢ Pg. 236 (middle): the two sentences starting with "However" under choice B seem to be duplicates
"¢ Pg. 246 (bottom): (F) should be (C)
"¢ Pg. 253(pt29, s4,q11): may include the user of language
"¢ Pg. 255(bottom first column): (C) is less a efficient fuel
"¢ Pg. 268(pt20,s1, q5): (C) of the first problem has an extra space in front of the text
"¢ Pg. 314(top): If A, then B.. Make an assumption explicit
"¢ Pg. 314(middle): Let’s (apostrophe is not curled)
"¢ Pg. 321(top) : Since either _O, or _FRI, by itself, guarantees"”TGA
"¢ Pg. 321(2/3 down italics): Because is it -FRI
"¢ Pg. 322(bottom): If Marcus wears a Jacket
"¢ Pg. 351 (bottom): in (B), the apostrophes are not curled
"¢ Pg. 358 (bottom): Think about is.
"¢ Pg. 363 (question 8): Some children are at once happy, healhty, and smart.
"¢ Pg. 372(left column middle): ( followed by a return, before "-profit"
"¢ Pg. 390: PT 42, S2, Q21, choice (E) should say "call (a) psychotherapist"
"¢ Pg. 396(2nd column middle): which does jibe somewhat
"¢ Pg. 398(1st column middle): "is not to evaluate the argument, it’s to"
"¢ Pg. 407(top): Take answer \(A) as an example.
"¢ Pg. 408 (claim 2): "When free to use their own judgment, judges invariably" ("judges" better if "people")
"¢ Pg. 422(pt18, s4,q2): less than I percent of the city’s deficit
"¢ Pg. 430(1st column top): The attacks the latter ("The" should be "She")
"¢ Pg. 430 (2nd column bottom): so (it’s) not a viable candidate for the conclusion
"¢ Pg. 434(2nd column middle): Juan thinks that the presence (of) professional athletes
"¢ Pg. 466: PT37, S4, Q6: the apostrophes are not curled
"¢ Pg. 474(1st column bottom): (for food/ for warmth)
"¢ Pg. 475: PT37, S4, Q6: the apostrophes are not curled
"¢ Pg. 502(middle): "always us(e) language literally"
"¢ Pg. 515(1st column bottom): un-used
"¢ Pg. 518(2nd column top): (A) has an extra space following it
"¢ Pg. 523(2nd column 1/3 down): it fails to prove sufficient evidence (should be provide)
"¢ Pg. 533: duplicate paragraphs in the middle of the page
"¢ Pg. 544(bottom): In the discussion of (B), the detail creep actually makes this choice correct. Perhaps, "irrelevant" might be a better word.
 
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Re: Errata list - Manhattan LSAT 2nd edition

by theaether Thu Apr 28, 2011 8:36 pm

Just got my 2nd editions today. Is this thread to add in some more nitpicking? on P42 of the LR book the conclusion is stated "increase in detectors from 30% to 45% does not make home fires any less likely." In my opinion, it should read "does not make detection of home fires any less likely." What do you think?
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Re: Errata list - Manhattan LSAT 2nd edition

by LSAT-Chang Tue Jul 19, 2011 3:17 pm

A minor error I found: RC Strategy Guide pg. 46 3rd-4th line from the top of the page: "For one, most of use (should be us) read much more actively..."
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Re: Errata list - Manhattan LSAT 2nd edition

by noah Sun Jul 31, 2011 9:15 pm

And, here's one that someone sent in - thanks!

staceyhursh Wrote:Didn't see this listed but in LG 2nd ed page 156 and 157, question 5 on page 156 says "neither Y nor Z can be odd...." but in the solutions on page 157 it says "neither Y nor Z can be even...."


The question is correctly printed, just the solution text is wrong.
 
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Re: Errata list - Manhattan LSAT 2nd edition LOGICAL REASONING

by timmydoeslsat Wed Aug 24, 2011 2:48 pm

On page 486, the part entitled "1. Match the Reasoning" has a flaw.

The original has a valid conclusion, while the correct answer does not.

The correct answer goes from:

All children on playground are in the fifth grade
+
Lisa is on the playground
_____________________________________________
Lisa is in fifth grade.


We do not know that Lisa is not a parent or a teacher. Just a simple error of not stating that Lisa is a child.
 
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Re: Errata list - Manhattan LSAT 2nd edition LOGICAL REASONING

by deweykang Mon Oct 17, 2011 2:14 pm

Page 159 - "(D) recognix ze (recognize) that two different methods of investigation can yield identical results"

:)
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Re: Errata list - Manhattan LSAT 2nd edition LOGICAL REASONING

by ManhattanPrepLSAT1 Thu Oct 20, 2011 5:21 pm

Thanks! got it...
 
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Re: Errata list - Manhattan LSAT 2nd edition LOGICAL REASONING

by wsjstockstar Sun Jan 01, 2012 2:10 pm

On page 88 (LR Strategy Guide 2nd Edition), should the following sentence:

"Now, here's comes the really challenging stuff."

read as follows:

"Now, here comes the really challenging stuff."

:?:
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Re: Errata list - Manhattan LSAT 2nd edition LOGICAL REASONING

by noah Wed Jan 04, 2012 4:03 pm

wsjstockstar Wrote:On page 88 (LR Strategy Guide 2nd Edition), should the following sentence:

"Now, here's comes the really challenging stuff."

read as follows:

"Now, here comes the really challenging stuff."

:?:

Now, that embarrassing. :)

Thanks for alerting us - we'll get that fixed for our next print run.
 
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Re: Errata list - Manhattan LSAT 2nd edition

by gmatalongthewatchtower Wed Jul 18, 2012 1:49 pm

Mike.Kim Wrote:Hi - thanks for your question! --

(B) is a challenging answer choice, and I think I understand how you are thinking about it. I think the key is to interpret the wording exactly.

What it states is "At least some voters who prefer Candidate B do not share at least one common concern with at least one voter who prefers Candidate A."

In your example, you had two people in group (B) - let's think about them one at a time:

Person 1: Do we know for sure person 1 shares a common concern with at least one person who prefers Candidate A?

Yes we do -- she shares the common concern of school budgeting with one person who prefers Candidate A.

Person 2: Do we know for sure? Yes we do, for the same reasons.

So, in your example, both people in group B DO share at least one issue in common with someone in group A -- which leads answer (B) to be false.

Now, if (B) were worded slightly differently -- if it was worded either "At least some voters who prefer A don't share a common concern with voters who prefer B" or "At least some voters who prefer B don't share a common concern with ALL of the voters who prefer A" the answer would be very different.

Hope that is helpful in clarifying. Please let us know if it isn't, and I'll be happy to discuss further!



Mike,
I was confused about B). I Tim's example :
3A and 2B
A = (2 -budgeting; 1 Crime)
B = (2- budgeting)
I see your point that "at least some voters who prefer B don't share a common concern with ALL voters who prefer A" is true. However, "at least some voters who prefer B do NOT share a common concern with AT LEAST ONE VOTER who prefer A" is ALSO true. (1 crime guy in A doesn't share common concern about budgeting) Just because one Inference is true, it doesn't mean that the second inference will be false. Correct?

I am still not clear why B) is incorrect. I see that it is not true, but it could be true.

Thoughts?

Voodoo
 
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Re: Errata list - Manhattan LSAT 2nd edition LOGICAL REASONING

by nmop_apisdn2 Mon Jul 23, 2012 10:58 pm

Is there a reason for why you switched from using regular text in explaining the answer choices to italicized text in explaining the answer choices on page 230? The book switches back to regular text on page 236.

Something small, but I think it would be better if the book is consistent in that regard. It kind of threw me off for a second, as I was thinking I was reading something else and not the description for why the answer choices were wrong/right. Consistency is clutch!

Just something to ponder, Noah.

Thanks!
 
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Re: Errata list - Manhattan LSAT 2nd edition LOGICAL REASONING

by nmop_apisdn2 Mon Jul 23, 2012 11:14 pm

Found another error.

On page 232, where it discusses the categories of incorrect answer choices for strengthen or weakening questions, it says: "If you can't see how the answer impacts the author's point, or if you can see the answer either strengthening or weakening the argument, depending on how you interpret the answer choice or on what assumptions you make, that's a good sign it neither strengthens nor weakens."

Shouldn't the bolded and underlined word be "can't"?
:lol:

I think it should be.
 
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Re: Errata list - Manhattan LSAT 2nd edition

by gmatalongthewatchtower Mon Aug 06, 2012 12:55 pm

gmatalongthewatchtower Wrote:
Mike.Kim Wrote:Hi - thanks for your question! --

(B) is a challenging answer choice, and I think I understand how you are thinking about it. I think the key is to interpret the wording exactly.

What it states is "At least some voters who prefer Candidate B do not share at least one common concern with at least one voter who prefers Candidate A."

In your example, you had two people in group (B) - let's think about them one at a time:

Person 1: Do we know for sure person 1 shares a common concern with at least one person who prefers Candidate A?

Yes we do -- she shares the common concern of school budgeting with one person who prefers Candidate A.

Person 2: Do we know for sure? Yes we do, for the same reasons.

So, in your example, both people in group B DO share at least one issue in common with someone in group A -- which leads answer (B) to be false.

Now, if (B) were worded slightly differently -- if it was worded either "At least some voters who prefer A don't share a common concern with voters who prefer B" or "At least some voters who prefer B don't share a common concern with ALL of the voters who prefer A" the answer would be very different.

Hope that is helpful in clarifying. Please let us know if it isn't, and I'll be happy to discuss further!



Mike,
I was confused about B). I Tim's example :
3A and 2B
A = (2 -budgeting; 1 Crime)
B = (2- budgeting)
I see your point that "at least some voters who prefer B don't share a common concern with ALL voters who prefer A" is true. However, "at least some voters who prefer B do NOT share a common concern with AT LEAST ONE VOTER who prefer A" is ALSO true. (1 crime guy in A doesn't share common concern about budgeting) Just because one Inference is true, it doesn't mean that the second inference will be false. Correct?

I am still not clear why B) is incorrect. I see that it is not true, but it could be true.

Thoughts?

Voodoo



MLSAT teachers,
Can you please help me with my question above?


Thanks in advance.

Voodoo
 
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Re: Errata list - Manhattan LSAT 2nd edition LOGICAL REASONING

by timmydoeslsat Mon Aug 06, 2012 1:36 pm

I am not aware of the location of this question. Will you please post it?
 
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Re: Errata list - Manhattan LSAT 2nd edition LOGICAL REASONING

by gmatalongthewatchtower Wed Aug 08, 2012 2:56 pm

sure - here's the question:



Mike,
I was confused about B) On pg. 445 of the MLSAT Book.

Let's say :

3A and 2B
A = (2 -budgeting; 1 Crime)
B = (2- budgeting)
I see your point that "at least some voters who prefer B don't share a common concern with ALL voters who prefer A" is true. However, "at least some voters who prefer B do NOT share a common concern with AT LEAST ONE VOTER who prefer A" is ALSO true. (1 crime guy in A doesn't share common concern about budgeting) Just because one Inference is true, it doesn't mean that the second inference will be false. Correct?

I am still not clear why B) is incorrect. I see that it is not true, but it could be true.

Thoughts?