- Tue Jun 25, 2024 7:26 pm
#107146
You are indeed misinterpreting the question stem, bruxellesjetaime, and it's an understandable mistake. Some "Must Be True" questions really do ask for something that must be true, but many of them only ask for the one answer that gets more support than any of the others. Some people call that a "Most Strongly Supported" question, others call it a "soft" Must Be True. That's what this question is.
No matter what you call it, the answer doesn't need to be ironclad or perfect. It just needs to have more support than any other answer, and while there is at least some support for answer A, there is none for any other answer choice. Thus, since the stem only asks for the answer (among the five choices given) that the facts "most strongly support," answer A has to be the correct response. Do the facts prove answer A? No, for the reasons you mentioned. Do they offer at least some support for A? Absolutely, and that makes it a winner!
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
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