- Mon Aug 26, 2019 1:01 pm
#67599
Hi cascott15,
This is a very good question that I've noticed a lot of people struggle with on Principle questions, because they treat Principle questions as a question type unto themselves and not as subsets of already-existing question types (which is how PowerScore treats them in both the Logical Reasoning Bible and our courses).
This specific principle question is what we would call a "Strengthen-Principle." Why? Because, according to the question stem, what we're being asked to identify is a rule in the answer choices that "most helps to justify" (in other words, that "most strengthens") the reasoning in the argument. On a Strengthen-Principle question, the broader and the more certain the language of the rule, the more likely the rule will "cover" (i.e. "apply to") the facts being described in the argument and lead to the conclusion with certainty (and therefore the more likely the rule will strengthen the reasoning). So the construct you're bringing to the question is the exact opposite of what you need to identify the correct answer. Your instinct about the strength of the language in answer choice A is correct (it's very broad and certain!). But that's exactly what we'd like to find on a Strengthen-Principle (and, really, any Strengthen) question. The same would be true of a Justify-Principle question.
More generally, in which general question types do we want to find strong answers (and not worry if they include "new" information that the stimulus didn't refer to)? Strengthen, Justify, Resolve the Paradox, and Weaken questions.
In which general question types do we want to be wary of language that's overly strong and broad? Must Be True and Assumption questions.
I hope this helps!
Jeremy
Jeremy Press
LSAT Instructor and law school admissions consultant
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