- Wed Apr 24, 2024 8:50 am
#106131
I picked E when I first did this test, and I just want to make sure I have the correct process for next time. I have a follow-up question regarding the explanation from Rachel:
"For answer choice (E), notice that the answer choice is phrased in terms of what should be done, not on what is actually done. Our stimulus was all about what actually occurs. We can't jump from a set of facts about what does occur to an opinion about what should be done. "
I normally am skeptical of prescriptive statements in the LSAT, but when the author is arguing for something, then I feel it's more fair game. So, I didn't think the passage was just a 'set of facts'. When I read E, I thought that this was underlying the Passage A. I interpreted the first paragraph of passage A to be subtly hinting at a preference for copyright law. As if to say something like, if only it were cheaper to go through legal means, then comedians would do it. Maybe my issue was in thinking that there was a subtly prescriptive tone in Passage A, when in fact it was more neutral about copyright law? (This might relate to a general assumption I have that LSAT is positive towards regulation).