- Tue Aug 20, 2019 12:44 pm
#67418
Hi Andriana,
I can see a couple problems here in your evaluation of answer choice C. First, you said that you "assumed the author was using an arbitrary definition of the word satisfied." But "using an arbitrary definition" of a term is a different problem than "fail[ing] to define the term," which is what answer choice C actually says. Also, don't assume a meaning (especially an arbitrary one!) applies in an argument, unless you have textual evidence that what you are assuming is what the author actually means. If the author doesn't tell you the meaning of the term, you don't have any evidence to assume that the usage of the term is arbitrary.
There's a bigger problem with answer choice C, though. The term "satisfied" is not a "critical" term in the argument. A critical term is one that provides a crucial part of the support for the conclusion. Here, the premises about some students' levels of satisfaction with the ultimate course-planning system are not especially relevant for determining whether the proposal should be undertaken or not. Thus, those premises, and the terms used in articulating those premises, are not "critical."
I'll refer you back to Dave's great answer for why answer choice A is correct here: the conclusion is about the proposal, and the premises don't talk about the proposal itself (what does it say, how will it work, what will its educational outcomes be). It may be true that the reaction of some students to the proposal is one very minor issue related to the proposal (one very small element of the outcomes of the proposal). But even still, as you note, there are many other issues to consider with the proposal (the ones I mentioned, plus the one you noted--other students' satisfaction), and the argument avoids them all (thus generally avoiding "the issue").
I hope this helps!
Jeremy
Jeremy Press
LSAT Instructor and law school admissions consultant
Follow me on Twitter at:
https://twitter.com/JeremyLSAT