- Thu Feb 23, 2012 12:00 am
#35681
Complete Question Explanation
Weaken. The correct answer choice is (C)
Since the key to weakening an LSAT argument is to focus on the conclusion, it is essential to break
down the argument, which is structured as follows:
Premise: Modern deep-diving marine mammals have porous bone shells.
Premise: Porous bone shells make it easier for animals to swing back to the
surface after a deep dive.
Premise: The outer shell of the bones was also porous in the ichthyosaur, a
prehistoric marine reptile.
Conclusion: Ichthyosaurs were deep divers.
The conclusion of the argument is the final sentence, which contains the conclusion indicator “we
can conclude from this that…” Although this appears to be a causal argument (porous bones cause
the animals to swim back to the surface more easily), the relationship between the premises and the
conclusion is a conditional one:
DDM = Deep Diving Mammals
PBS = Porous Bone Shells
DD = Deep Divers
S N
Premise: DDM PBS
Premise: PBSIchthyosaur
Conclusion: DDIchthyosaur
The author’s conclusion is flawed for several reasons. First, ichthyosaurs are marine reptiles, not
mammals. Due to the skeletal or other physiological differences between the two, it is possible that
a marine reptile with porous bones uses them for a different purpose than a marine mammal does.
More importantly, the conclusion takes the form of a Mistaken Reversal:
Mistaken Reversal: PBSIchthyosaur DDIchthyosaur
Just because the ichthyosaur shares a feature common to all deep diving marine mammals does
not necessarily mean that ichthyosaurs were also deep divers. Having porous bone shells may be a
necessary condition for deep diving, but it is not a sufficient one.
To weaken this argument, look for an answer choice attacking this Mistaken Reversal. For instance,
you can show that at least some animals whose bones have a porous outer shell are not deep divers.
Alternatively, you can show that at least some non-diving animals do have porous bones. Indeed,
any answer choice attacking the necessary condition in the Mistaken Reversal would undermine the
conclusion of the argument.
Answer choice (A): This answer choice implies that having porous bones is not a necessary
precondition for deep diving in general. This fact, however, is consistent with the author’s premise
in the first sentence of the stimulus, which only addressed deep-diving marine mammals, not marine
species in general. Furthermore, the fact that having porous bones is not a necessary precondition
for deep diving does not weaken the conclusion of the argument, because we already know that
ichthyosaurs do have porous bones. The conclusion is assuming that having porous bones is a
sufficient condition for an animal to be a deep diver, not a necessary precondition for deep diving.
Answer choice (B): The fact that most modern marine reptiles do not have porous bone shells is
irrelevant, because it is unclear whether these marine reptiles are actually deep divers. Perhaps the
ichthyosaur, a marine reptile, was unlike most modern marine reptiles in that it was a deep diver
while the modern marine reptiles are not.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice. If most marine reptiles that are not deep
divers have porous bones, this would show that having such bones is not a sufficient condition
for an animal to be a deep diver. This would be consistent with the premise of the argument, but
immediately undermine the conditional relationship upon which the conclusion depends.
Answer choice (D): Just because ichthyosaurs do not share some other characteristics suited to deep
diving has no bearing on whether ichthyosaurs were themselves deep divers. There is no evidence
that the characteristics shared by whales are necessary for deep diving: they are merely suited to it,
and are shared by some marine mammals, not reptiles.
Answer choice (E): The fact that ichthyosaurs could have been deep divers even without porous bone
shells only strengthens the conclusion of the argument. Again, the author is assuming that having
porous bones is a sufficient condition for an animal to be a deep diver, not a necessary precondition
for it. Therefore, it is entirely plausible that ichthyosaurs could have been deep divers for some
reason other than their porous bone shells.
Weaken. The correct answer choice is (C)
Since the key to weakening an LSAT argument is to focus on the conclusion, it is essential to break
down the argument, which is structured as follows:
Premise: Modern deep-diving marine mammals have porous bone shells.
Premise: Porous bone shells make it easier for animals to swing back to the
surface after a deep dive.
Premise: The outer shell of the bones was also porous in the ichthyosaur, a
prehistoric marine reptile.
Conclusion: Ichthyosaurs were deep divers.
The conclusion of the argument is the final sentence, which contains the conclusion indicator “we
can conclude from this that…” Although this appears to be a causal argument (porous bones cause
the animals to swim back to the surface more easily), the relationship between the premises and the
conclusion is a conditional one:
DDM = Deep Diving Mammals
PBS = Porous Bone Shells
DD = Deep Divers
S N
Premise: DDM PBS
Premise: PBSIchthyosaur
Conclusion: DDIchthyosaur
The author’s conclusion is flawed for several reasons. First, ichthyosaurs are marine reptiles, not
mammals. Due to the skeletal or other physiological differences between the two, it is possible that
a marine reptile with porous bones uses them for a different purpose than a marine mammal does.
More importantly, the conclusion takes the form of a Mistaken Reversal:
Mistaken Reversal: PBSIchthyosaur DDIchthyosaur
Just because the ichthyosaur shares a feature common to all deep diving marine mammals does
not necessarily mean that ichthyosaurs were also deep divers. Having porous bone shells may be a
necessary condition for deep diving, but it is not a sufficient one.
To weaken this argument, look for an answer choice attacking this Mistaken Reversal. For instance,
you can show that at least some animals whose bones have a porous outer shell are not deep divers.
Alternatively, you can show that at least some non-diving animals do have porous bones. Indeed,
any answer choice attacking the necessary condition in the Mistaken Reversal would undermine the
conclusion of the argument.
Answer choice (A): This answer choice implies that having porous bones is not a necessary
precondition for deep diving in general. This fact, however, is consistent with the author’s premise
in the first sentence of the stimulus, which only addressed deep-diving marine mammals, not marine
species in general. Furthermore, the fact that having porous bones is not a necessary precondition
for deep diving does not weaken the conclusion of the argument, because we already know that
ichthyosaurs do have porous bones. The conclusion is assuming that having porous bones is a
sufficient condition for an animal to be a deep diver, not a necessary precondition for deep diving.
Answer choice (B): The fact that most modern marine reptiles do not have porous bone shells is
irrelevant, because it is unclear whether these marine reptiles are actually deep divers. Perhaps the
ichthyosaur, a marine reptile, was unlike most modern marine reptiles in that it was a deep diver
while the modern marine reptiles are not.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice. If most marine reptiles that are not deep
divers have porous bones, this would show that having such bones is not a sufficient condition
for an animal to be a deep diver. This would be consistent with the premise of the argument, but
immediately undermine the conditional relationship upon which the conclusion depends.
Answer choice (D): Just because ichthyosaurs do not share some other characteristics suited to deep
diving has no bearing on whether ichthyosaurs were themselves deep divers. There is no evidence
that the characteristics shared by whales are necessary for deep diving: they are merely suited to it,
and are shared by some marine mammals, not reptiles.
Answer choice (E): The fact that ichthyosaurs could have been deep divers even without porous bone
shells only strengthens the conclusion of the argument. Again, the author is assuming that having
porous bones is a sufficient condition for an animal to be a deep diver, not a necessary precondition
for it. Therefore, it is entirely plausible that ichthyosaurs could have been deep divers for some
reason other than their porous bone shells.