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 Imcuffy
  • Posts: 17
  • Joined: Aug 19, 2020
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#79059
Thanks! It makes more sense. I think part of the confusion was that I was not fully understanding that the conclusion would become my necessary condition and I would need an answer choice, sufficient condition, to prove that conclusion. And by doing this, I would need to link the supporting premise(s) to the conclusion. By that, it often requires a strong prephrase.
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 PresidentLSAT
  • Posts: 87
  • Joined: Apr 19, 2021
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#86548
Hi,

I've read the explanations but I'm starting to think I got this question right by luck.

My instant preface for the answer without going to the answer choices was that you cannot attain a precise understanding of ambiguity. Those two mutually exclusive. "Precise understanding" in the conclusion is what I tied into the premise "ambiguity." Why should have to tie in the "enjoyment" when the argument is about the attainment of a precise understanding.

I ruled out a different reason.

Writers rely on ambiguity when they want to resort to personal expression. That doesn't rule out the plausibility that writers use ambiguity when they want to express other stuff, i.e cultural issues, history, foreign affairs etc. In this case, they may use words ambiguously because it's a campaign speech, and the vaguer you are, the more of a wider audience you can reach. In this case, how do you justify that voters won't try to understand precisely what you're saying?

My reasoning for A made C more confusing.

I settled with it because my assumption is that ambiguity and precise understanding are mutually exclusive. C sort of describes that. Please help :cry:
 Rachael Wilkenfeld
PowerScore Staff
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#87574
Hi PresidentLSAT,

You are dancing right around the correct reasoning here, so don't think of it as a luck. Give yourself credit for the work you've done!

Your prephrase had some of the key ideas you needed, but was missing one aspect---the idea of the reader's enjoyment.

Let's jump in at the beginning.

P1: writer whose purpose is personal expression :arrow: sometimes ambiguous
P2: poet :arrow: purpose is personal expression
Deduction: Poet :arrow: personal expression :arrow: sometimes ambiguous

C: poetry reader's enjoyment :arrow: NOT precise understanding (i.e.: Ambiguous use of words).

What jumps out to you as new in the conclusion? Hopefully it's the idea of the reader's enjoyment. We don't know ANYTHING about the reader from the premises. So for us to draw a conclusion about the reader's enjoyment, we are going to need a justify answer choice that addresses that new aspect. And that's the key difference here between answer choices (A) and (C).

Hope that helps!
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 fortunateking
  • Posts: 31
  • Joined: Jan 10, 2022
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#96346
I can fully understand why C is the correct answer for this justify question. But what slowed me down is that it seems to be that (A) and (C) are identical. My thought was, for readers whose enjoyment depends on a precise understanding, they have to try to attain a precise understanding (to gain enjoyment), which can be diagrammed as:
readers whose enjoyment depends on a precise understanding→readers who try to attain a precise understanding
So for (A), "writers who write ambiguously have no readers who try to attain a precise understanding" can be transformed to "writers who write ambiguously have no readers whose enjoyment depends on a precise understanding", which makes (A) the same thing as (C).
Where did I go wrong?
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 sunshine123
  • Posts: 44
  • Joined: Jul 18, 2022
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#97201
Howdy,

Say we have the argument,

Premise: A

So, naturally, : B

And say we were asked to find a sufficient assumption for the argument. Would an answer choice that TAKES us to the conclusion, while introducing new information(info that was not in stimulus) as part of its sufficient condition, be enough to justify the conclusion? Would answer choice, if C then B be enough? be correct? If not, why not?

Thanks in advance!
 Adam Tyson
PowerScore Staff
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#97283
fortunateking - the problem with answer A is that it makes no connection to "enjoyment." It doesn't matter what they are trying to do; it matters whether they actually do attain that precise understanding and whether that has some impact on their enjoyment. It was a very attractive answer, but we have to deal with the concept of "enjoyment" and should not make any assumptions about it.

Sunshine - it's possible that a good answer would bring up some new idea that was not in the premises that would guarantee the truth of the conclusion. Maybe something like "the only readers whose enjoyment depends on attaining precise understanding are those who read nothing but cookbooks." That may happen on occasion. But most Justify the Conclusion questions are looking for us to close a gap in the argument more directly than that, so always start your attack by looking for that link. here, it should b a link between ambiguous use of words and enjoyment.

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