- Tue Mar 30, 2021 10:33 am
#85978
Hi itstanaya,
What you describe wouldn't necessarily be a problem on a Strengthen-Principle question. We're not really looking for "errors" in the principles. After all, the question stem asks us to take the principles at face value (Which one, "if valid"...). Here, we just need a principle that could "cover" (speak to) the facts of the premise(s) and the recommendation the author desires in the conclusion.
The problem with answer choice A is that it doesn't actually "cover," or speak to, the facts in the premises, because the answer refers to a comparison, "greater number of close personal relationships," whereas the premise in the stimulus is speaking in absolute terms about potentially not having "some" of the close personal relationships someone has. In other words, the author of the stimulus is concerned with those particular relationships (having some particular friend that you wouldn't have had otherwise) and not with the relative quantity of those relationships (having "more" of them than you would have had otherwise). So, answer choice A doesn't "cover" the facts of the premises and cannot help the author reach the conclusion they want to reach.
I hope this helps!
Jeremy Press
LSAT Instructor and law school admissions consultant