

- PowerScore Staff
- Posts: 893
- Joined: Jan 11, 2016
- Thu May 24, 2018 11:29 am
#45886
We received the following question from a student. An instructor will respond below. Thanks!
Hello,
My name is Kawa and I am writing to you from Toronto, Canada. I recently picked up the Logical Reasoning Bible. Though I started studying with it recently, it’s already proving to be useful. Thank you!
I want to make sure I understand everything as well as I should. On page 36, regarding the answer key to one of the mini-drills from the preceding pages, I am having trouble with one of the sentences from the passage that you’ve designated as a counter-premise:
Counter-premise – “However, the separated juice contains impurities and many wineries do not filter the juice.”
I am clear on why the first part of this sentence (However, the separated juice contains impurities) is a counter-premise. What I don’t quite understand is why the second half of this sentence can be deemed as part of the counter-premise (...and many wineries do not filter the juice); from my reading of it, this aspect of the statement seems far more supportive of the argument the author is making. If many wineries do not filter the juice (as the experts would prefer) does it not help their position that they should be trusted and, therefore, the public should not shy away from unfiltered wine?
Forgive me if this is too nitpicky. I am determined to do really well on the LSAT and I want to thoroughly understand every detail and nuance you’ve laid out in this excellent book.
Thanks so much, in advance, for your help.
Kawa