- Mon Jan 04, 2021 6:56 am
#82949
Dave Killoran wrote: ↑Sat Jan 02, 2021 5:23 pmHmmmm thanks!! Seems to imply that this would almost never be the right answer on a flaw question.menkenj wrote: ↑Thu Dec 31, 2020 2:05 pm Hi, I fell for B but now see why it's wrong.Not to this exact phrasing that I can recall. To set up such a scenario would require a lot of barriers, and be specific about evidence being destroyed or permanently unavailable, etc. I think that would be very hard for them to do that with the word limits imposed in LR!
Is there an example of a past LSAT question where something like B would have been the right answer? I'm looking to understand this flaw type better, even though in this question it was the wrong answer.
thanks!