Logic Test - i don't get it

My post seems to have been lost in the woodwork so reposting
2) While the answer I'd expect is Correct, there is a case there no x exist, in which case no z are x.

7) As you've stated the question the answer is Correct, obviously disagreeing, are you sure you've copied it correctly?

8) The answer is Correct, some of Y are not Z, the fact that all of Y are not Z is irrelevant, you are only being asked whether some are, All is a subset of some.
 
Original questions:
2. a. All Canadians are right handed.
b. All right handed are opticians.

Conclusion is: Some opticians are Canadian.

Canadians = x
Right handed = y
Opticians = z

so
a. All of x are y
b. All of y are z
conclusion: Some z are x
---------------------------------------------
7. a. None of the chemists is an athlete.
b. All managers are athletes.

conclusion is: Some athletes are managers

Chemists = x
Athlete = y
Manager = z

so
a. None of x is y
b. All of z are y
Conclusion: Some of y are z
---------------------------------------------
8. a. None of the bee keepers is a cook.
b. All Dutch are bee keepers.

Conclusion is: Some cooks are not Dutch.

Bee keepers = x
Cook = y
Dutch = z

so
a. None of x is y
b. all of z are x
Conclusion: Some of y are not z
 
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Al Vallario why are you using external knowledge and bias to answer the questions? How can you not see that this defeats the whole purpose of the test?
 
By "inconclusive" what you meant to say is that the conclusion does not follow from the premises. In other words, the conclusion is not supported by the premises of the argument.
No I do not, I mean it is not possible to conclude whether the conclusion follows from the premises or it does not, that is what inconclusive means.
In a simple restricted question of logic it is a reasonably frequent and valid response, you'll note it is actually given as a response in one of the questions you yourself linked/quoted...

You seem insistent that you are some genius when it comes to these kind of questions, despite being glaringly wrong, and pretty much everyone else in the threads disagreement with what you are saying.
 
Al Vallario is actually right, the syllogism in the OP is AEO-3, an invalid type.
How, without adding in the assumption that a racing track is a route of transportation?

I do understand what he's saying but my general experience of these kind of questions is that they require you to use only the knowledge explicitly stated, the relative truth of that knowledge is irrelevant, and could be used to throw you off the correct answer.

Whether it is a valid syllogism or not is irrelevant in saying whether the premises provided lead to the provided conclusion, is it not? You only care whether it does, doesn't or you can't tell.
 
How, without adding in the assumption that a racing track is a route of transportation?

I do understand what he's saying but my general experience of these kind of questions is that they require you to use only the knowledge explicitly stated, the relative truth of that knowledge is irrelevant, and could be used to throw you off the correct answer.

Whether it is a valid syllogism or not is irrelevant in saying whether the premises provided lead to the provided conclusion, is it not? You only care whether it does, doesn't or you can't tell.

Maybe I shouldn't have said he was right, as I don't agree with his arguments, the conclusion presented is simply incorrect as the syllogism is invalid.
 
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