- Mon Jan 27, 2020 1:32 pm
#73585
Hi Jen,
This is actually a Resolve the Paradox question stem, which is in the same family (Family 2) as Strengthen questions, so you're in the right ballpark! Where there is not a complete argument in the stimulus (notice there's no conclusion in the stimulus, only a set of facts), and the question stem asks for an answer choice that explains a fact or facts in the stimulus, then you're dealing with a Resolve the Paradox question.
I don't know that diagramming is entirely necessary here, though I think you can find the implied conditional relationships you noticed: If you do continuous maintenance, then there's no need for radical recontruction. And, if you don't do continuous maintenance, then you will eventually have to do radical reconstruction.
What you're really looking for in the answer choice, though, is the "explanation" the question stem calls for. The correct answer should directly answer this question: "Why does continuous maintenance almost never happen?" That's your best prephrase: anything that tells me why continuous maintenance almost never happens. Answer choice E (as you note) gives us that reason: it almost never happens, because the consequences of NOT doing it aren't apparent to people for a very long time.
I hope this helps!
Jeremy
Jeremy Press
LSAT Instructor and law school admissions consultant