An answer seems to have emerged but following up #7 let me repeat that for question b most of what has been said is not wrong, but irrelevant.
Once given that the student knows rules for e.g. given f(x) to obtain f'(x), then given f'(x) he should be able to obtain f(x) from the same rules. For this:
- He does not need intuition
- Does not need these doctrines about integration
- Does not need to know the concept nor the word 'integration'
- Does not need to know anything about differention either
- Does not need to know what f'(x) means or what anyone says it means
- Also because it does not need to mean anything
- Only needs to know, as he has shown he does, a subset of the rules for obtaining f' given f
- In particular the rule for getting f'(axn) and f'(x + y)
- Does not need to know what axn means, nor even what + means, they do not have to mean anything.
That is, this question is not about calculus, it is algebraic, purely about consistent symbolic manipulation.
I could almost say pure logic but an abstract algebraist would probably say you'd be unconsciously using some laws you've never questioned of arithmetic or algebra, of maybe of addition, subtraction, well at least of a multiplication and
division. 

To emphasize the nature of the question you don't need to use the notation f' , you could just as well use any formula that has f and other symbols in it, e.g a rule like φ(f, a, n, x) = (f, na, n-1, x) or something even more minimal, and question something like: given (a, n, x) or (2, 2, 3) what is φ?