- Mon Mar 14, 2022 8:33 pm
#94243
The point that the author is trying to make here is that sales do not indicate success. Their evidence is that high sales could mean they are too trendy, while weak sales could mean they are not competent.
A good Strengthen answer will more powerfully tie the evidence to the conclusion, and to do that it needs to introduce some new information. It looks like it's that new info that is causing you some concern here, goingslow, in that "unsuccessful" seems a little like a new idea. That might be a problem if this was an Assumption or Must Be True question, but it's actually a good thing if you want to make the argument stronger!
So now ask yourself, if it's true that an underground group is unsuccessful if they are incompetent, and they are also unsuccessful if they are too trendy, would that help the claim that their sales won't indicate their success? If you see that they sold well, you wouldn't know if they were successful or if they were just too trendy, and if they did not sell well you wouldn't know if they were successful as an underground group (they avoided being too trendy) or if they were just incompetent. Adding that principle to the argument, you should think to yourself "well now I have no idea what these sales figures are telling me!" That helps to show that sales figures are not a mark of success.
Don't think of that link as being a stretch; think of it as new information which, if true, helps the argument. You don't have to prove that the answer is true; you have to accept that the answer is true, and then determine whether that answer helps the author.
A good Strengthen answer will more powerfully tie the evidence to the conclusion, and to do that it needs to introduce some new information. It looks like it's that new info that is causing you some concern here, goingslow, in that "unsuccessful" seems a little like a new idea. That might be a problem if this was an Assumption or Must Be True question, but it's actually a good thing if you want to make the argument stronger!
So now ask yourself, if it's true that an underground group is unsuccessful if they are incompetent, and they are also unsuccessful if they are too trendy, would that help the claim that their sales won't indicate their success? If you see that they sold well, you wouldn't know if they were successful or if they were just too trendy, and if they did not sell well you wouldn't know if they were successful as an underground group (they avoided being too trendy) or if they were just incompetent. Adding that principle to the argument, you should think to yourself "well now I have no idea what these sales figures are telling me!" That helps to show that sales figures are not a mark of success.
Don't think of that link as being a stretch; think of it as new information which, if true, helps the argument. You don't have to prove that the answer is true; you have to accept that the answer is true, and then determine whether that answer helps the author.
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
Follow me on Twitter at https://twitter.com/LSATadam
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
Follow me on Twitter at https://twitter.com/LSATadam