Well, I went and asked my professor for some clarity on the question, and he said for the "Reasoning" it asks for, to show with a thermodynamic property what would happen (ie with delta G). Somehow it made sense when he told me, but now I'm even more confused. He said something to the effect of 'if delta G was infinitely positive, the reaction would move in the left direction.' So for reasoning, could I just give a value of delta G that would result in the reaction going all the way to the right (inifintely negative G?) Totally confused now...I'll be reading my textbook to try to come to an epiphany, but if anyone would care to enlighten me along the way, I'm all for it. I may throw another qualitative question up here if I can't solve it in the next hour or so, so stay tuned.
EDIT: I'm just going to think out loud (and by out loud I mean on this thread). If Q = reaction quotient, then when Q is equal to 0 (zero meaning there is no product and only reactant), delta G should be equal to negative infinity, correct? So then, if there was all product and no reactant ( or at least as the reactant goes to zero), Q should go to infinity, and thusly delta G would go to infinity, right?