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#72943
Complete Question Explanation
Method-AP. The correct answer choice is (D).
When asked what role a claim plays in an argument, your task is to determine whether the claim in question is a premise, a conclusion, both, or some extraneous statement of no value (which it won't be for these questions because if it was, they wouldn't ask about it). Premises give support to other claims in the argument, while conclusions get support. Sometimes an answer is both a premise and a conclusion, and we call that an intermediate or subordinate conclusion.
The argument part under consideration here is the second half of the first sentence, the portion that is introduced by "but." Let's walk back through what we see in this argument to make a determination of what role this statement plays in the argument.
The argument begins by presenting a factual situation: "Currently, no satellite orbiting Earth is at significant risk of colliding with other satellites or satellite fragments, ..." The next statement follows the "but" and makes a claim, that the collision risk is "likely to increase dramatically in the future." Essentially, the first sentence has said "everything is fine now, but it;s getting way worse in the future." That naturally raises a question: Why? Why is it getting worse? Right away, that tells you that the portion after "but" is a conclusion of some sort, because when a statement needs some explanation and forces you to ask "Why?", it is a conclusion and what follows the "Why?" are premises.
So, the next sentence is indeed a premise, in part indicated by the "After all" which precedes it. And it offers some explanation for why things will get worse: as soon as we have a collision, we'll get a lot of new fragments, and each can cause other collisions. That's helpful, and then the next sentence adds more to that explanation: each subsequent collision will then cause more fragments, and so on, resulting in debris everywhere. Note that this last sentence could be seen as an intermediate conclusion of sorts because it goes further than the prior sentence, but then adds support to the main conclusion. Labelling it as such is not incorrect.
The final two sentences offer up a scenario of that provides a causal chain of why the author thinks things will get worse. Note: the causality here isn't relevant to the answer, it's just helps place all this in perspective.
Considered abstractly, the argument appears as follows, where everything is built around helping to support the claim in the second half of the first sentence:
With the above in hand, you should seek an answer that describes that the claim in question is the main conclusion of the argument.
Answer choice (A): As shown above, the claim in question is supported by the following sentences, so that portion is wrong (and thus this answer is automatically wrong). Additionally, this is the conclusion, not a supporting piece so that portion is wrong too. an answer that is wrong at every stage
Answer choice (B): Just like answer choice (A), this is a supported claim, so this answer is wrong. And additionally, this isn't the base premise for an intermediate conclusion, and so that portion is incorrect as well.
Answer choice (C): This describes an intermediate conclusion, but the claim in question does not support anything else, so this answer is just a distraction.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice, and matches the prephrase we produced.
Answer choice (E): The conclusion is essential to the argument, so this answer is incorrect.
Method-AP. The correct answer choice is (D).
When asked what role a claim plays in an argument, your task is to determine whether the claim in question is a premise, a conclusion, both, or some extraneous statement of no value (which it won't be for these questions because if it was, they wouldn't ask about it). Premises give support to other claims in the argument, while conclusions get support. Sometimes an answer is both a premise and a conclusion, and we call that an intermediate or subordinate conclusion.
The argument part under consideration here is the second half of the first sentence, the portion that is introduced by "but." Let's walk back through what we see in this argument to make a determination of what role this statement plays in the argument.
The argument begins by presenting a factual situation: "Currently, no satellite orbiting Earth is at significant risk of colliding with other satellites or satellite fragments, ..." The next statement follows the "but" and makes a claim, that the collision risk is "likely to increase dramatically in the future." Essentially, the first sentence has said "everything is fine now, but it;s getting way worse in the future." That naturally raises a question: Why? Why is it getting worse? Right away, that tells you that the portion after "but" is a conclusion of some sort, because when a statement needs some explanation and forces you to ask "Why?", it is a conclusion and what follows the "Why?" are premises.
So, the next sentence is indeed a premise, in part indicated by the "After all" which precedes it. And it offers some explanation for why things will get worse: as soon as we have a collision, we'll get a lot of new fragments, and each can cause other collisions. That's helpful, and then the next sentence adds more to that explanation: each subsequent collision will then cause more fragments, and so on, resulting in debris everywhere. Note that this last sentence could be seen as an intermediate conclusion of sorts because it goes further than the prior sentence, but then adds support to the main conclusion. Labelling it as such is not incorrect.
The final two sentences offer up a scenario of that provides a causal chain of why the author thinks things will get worse. Note: the causality here isn't relevant to the answer, it's just helps place all this in perspective.
Considered abstractly, the argument appears as follows, where everything is built around helping to support the claim in the second half of the first sentence:
- Premise: First part of first sentence
Conclusion: Second part of first sentence
Premise: Second sentence:
Premise: Third sentence.
With the above in hand, you should seek an answer that describes that the claim in question is the main conclusion of the argument.
Answer choice (A): As shown above, the claim in question is supported by the following sentences, so that portion is wrong (and thus this answer is automatically wrong). Additionally, this is the conclusion, not a supporting piece so that portion is wrong too. an answer that is wrong at every stage
Answer choice (B): Just like answer choice (A), this is a supported claim, so this answer is wrong. And additionally, this isn't the base premise for an intermediate conclusion, and so that portion is incorrect as well.
Answer choice (C): This describes an intermediate conclusion, but the claim in question does not support anything else, so this answer is just a distraction.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice, and matches the prephrase we produced.
Answer choice (E): The conclusion is essential to the argument, so this answer is incorrect.
Dave Killoran
PowerScore Test Preparation
Follow me on X/Twitter at http://twitter.com/DaveKilloran
My LSAT Articles: http://blog.powerscore.com/lsat/author/dave-killoran
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PowerScore Test Preparation
Follow me on X/Twitter at http://twitter.com/DaveKilloran
My LSAT Articles: http://blog.powerscore.com/lsat/author/dave-killoran
PowerScore Podcast: http://www.powerscore.com/lsat/podcast/