LSAT and Law School Admissions Forum

Get expert LSAT preparation and law school admissions advice from PowerScore Test Preparation.

 Administrator
PowerScore Staff
  • PowerScore Staff
  • Posts: 8950
  • Joined: Feb 02, 2011
|
#33126
Complete Question Explanation

Weaken—#%. The correct answer choice is (B)

The weakness in this argument is difficult to spot because the terms used in the stimulus are designed to focus you too narrowly on the numbers involved with the increase in population and the fresh water supply. The use of these terms is very subtle, and the logical gap is very easy to miss.

The stimulus author disagrees with people who claim that water shortages will plague humankind in the near future unless population growth trends change. While the claim is conditional—notice the term “unless”—the focus of the conclusion is not on conditional reasoning. Instead, it is on the numbers involved with “population growth trends” and “water shortages.”

The author concedes that Earth’s human population is increasing, but disagrees with the water shortage claim because the population uses only a relatively small fraction of the supply of fresh water. Here is where the subtlety comes into play. The terms used in the premises and the conclusion are similar, but not identical. The difference between these terms permits a strong prephrase.

The conclusion refers to “population growth trends,” while the premise refers to the increase in human population. Although the increase in human population is a part of what makes up the population growth trends, the growth trends also involve where in the world those increases are occurring.

Along the same line, the conclusion refers to “water shortages,” while the premise talks about the “supply of fresh water.” This difference is very subtle. When you discuss the supply of fresh water, using the singular “water,” you are talking about the total amount of fresh water available on the planet. If there is not enough fresh water, in total, on the planet, then there is a fresh water shortage, not fresh water shortages. The use of the plural for “shortages” implies a shortage in more than one location.

Taken together, these two differences between the terms used in the premise and those used in the conclusion provide a very strong understanding of the flaw in the stimulus: the conclusion is about the fresh water shortages in various locations resulting from the increasing human population in those areas, while the premise only provides evidence about the relationship of the human population as a whole compared to the total amount of fresh water available on Earth. So, the prephrase in this Weaken question is that the author has failed to consider the local differences in population growth and the supply of fresh water. For example, there may be plenty of fresh water to support an increasing population in Minnesota (i.e., the “land of 10,000 lakes”), but not enough fresh water to support an increasing population in Death Valley National Park (the driest place in North America).

Answer choice (A): The argument does not rely on the accuracy of future predictions. Instead, the conclusion expresses disagreement with the view that should present population growth trends remain unchanged, then water shortages will plague humankind in the near future.

Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. The prephrase focused on the difference between a shortage of water and water shortages. If it is true that the amount of fresh water available to meet the needs of the human population varies significantly from region to region (i.e., the needs in Minnesota are different than those in Death Valley and are different than those in New York City), then there is reason to doubt the conclusion, and to think that there may be cause to worry about water shortages even though the human population uses only a relatively small fraction of the total supply of fresh water.

Answer choice (C): The premise established that the human population uses only a relatively small fraction of the supply of fresh water. Unless there is some other issue, such as the water not being in the places where the people need it, there is no reason to think that conservation methods are necessary.

Answer choice (D): The conclusion in the stimulus dealt with a limited time frame, stating that the water shortage would occur in the near future. This answer choice deals with what will occur “eventually,” a different, and ambiguous, time frame. Accordingly, this answer has no effect on the conclusion.

Answer choice (E): The conclusion had to do with the amount of fresh water available for use by humankind, not with the various ways in which people will use the water. So, comparing the rates of increase of two uses of fresh water is irrelevant to the conclusion, especially since this answer choice does not offer any reason to think the amount of fresh water used will increase to levels that are problematic.
 Deepthika
  • Posts: 3
  • Joined: Nov 21, 2014
|
#17455
Hi Everybody!

I am so sorry for posting such a long list of questions but I only recently discovered this forum and I have accumulated several practice questions that I am having difficulty with understanding the following questions given that there are no explanation notes for some of the take home tests;

October 2013, Section VI, Logical Reasoning 2, Question 12

Thanks,

Deepthika
 David Boyle
PowerScore Staff
  • PowerScore Staff
  • Posts: 836
  • Joined: Jun 07, 2013
|
#17458
Deepthika wrote:Hi Everybody!

I am so sorry for posting such a long list of questions but I only recently discovered this forum and I have accumulated several practice questions that I am having difficulty with understanding the following questions given that there are no explanation notes for some of the take home tests;

October 2013, Section VI, Logical Reasoning 2, Question 12

Thanks,

Deepthika
Hello Deepthika,

Glad you discovered the forum!
Would you mind asking a more specific question about question 12, if possible? And about the other questions you posted on the forum? It helps teachers to focus if you have a specific question. (Most students using the forum say something like, "I chose B but the answer was C. I thought B was a good answer as to why clowns drive around in little clown cars! Why was B wrong?" That lets us see exactly what we should focus on in helping you with the problem.) Thanks,

Hope this helps,
David
 David Boyle
PowerScore Staff
  • PowerScore Staff
  • Posts: 836
  • Joined: Jun 07, 2013
|
#17464
David Boyle wrote:
Deepthika wrote:Hi Everybody!

I am so sorry for posting such a long list of questions but I only recently discovered this forum and I have accumulated several practice questions that I am having difficulty with understanding the following questions given that there are no explanation notes for some of the take home tests;

October 2013, Section VI, Logical Reasoning 2, Question 12

Thanks,

Deepthika
Hello Deepthika,

Glad you discovered the forum!
Would you mind asking a more specific question about question 12, if possible? And about the other questions you posted on the forum? It helps teachers to focus if you have a specific question. (Most students using the forum say something like, "I chose B but the answer was C. I thought B was a good answer as to why clowns drive around in little clown cars! Why was B wrong?" That lets us see exactly what we should focus on in helping you with the problem.) Thanks,

Hope this helps,
David
Hello again,

In this question from Section IV (I think you said Section VI above :D ), the word "plague humankind" has some elasticity to it. "Plague" doesn't mean wipe out the whole human race, necessarily. On that note, B is the best answer choice, in that portions of humanity can be hurt, in particular regions of the Earth, and that still counts as "plague humankind", even if not all humanity is affected.

David
 Deepthika
  • Posts: 3
  • Joined: Nov 21, 2014
|
#17466
Hello David,
I apologise for my late reply! I live in Sri Lanka which is on the other side of the world so the time differences can be annoying! I know that when you weaken an argument you are attacking the conclusion whilst leaving the premises intact, hence am I correct in saying that the statement that begins with 'Thus claims that water shortages will plague human kind in the near future unless population growth trends change are simply mistaken' is the one that needs to be attacked/weakend?
I came down to the Answer B and D and I picked D because I thought that by showing that all available resources will be outstriped, it would mean that there will be a water shortage which will plague the human kind.
I see what you mean by that plague doesn't mean wipe out but I still don't understand why regional differences could cause water shortages in the future?

Also, I was wondering given the indicator word 'unless' in the conclusion whether there is any way conditional reasoning is involved in solving the problem. Of course I could be overthinking as usual! :(
Thank you!
 BethRibet
PowerScore Staff
  • PowerScore Staff
  • Posts: 200
  • Joined: Oct 17, 2012
|
#17506
Hi Deepthika,

Thanks for the question. Because the conclusion focuses on the "near future", answer choice D, which indicates a dynamic will "eventually" occur does not substantially weaken the argument.

Answer choice B however, gives us a reason why there could be water shortages in the near future. If some parts of the world only have a water supply sufficient for the existing population, and the population increases in those regions, it could soon be true that there are water shortages in those regions, even while only a fraction of the global water supply is in use.

Hope this helps!
Beth
User avatar
 kavyakarthic
  • Posts: 9
  • Joined: May 27, 2024
|
#107856
Hello,

Is it possible to get the right answer if you missed the distinction between the phrasing in the premises and the conclusion? I narrowed it down to B + D, but picked D because 1) I missed the nuance in the stimulus and 2) I thought the answer choice wasn't too vague to not affect the conclusion, since the term "near future" is also vague. If I miss this distinction on the exam, is it a good rule to be wary of answers with vague terminology, like "eventually" or "someday?"

Thank you!
User avatar
 Dana D
PowerScore Staff
  • PowerScore Staff
  • Posts: 385
  • Joined: Feb 06, 2024
|
#107987
Hey Kavyakarthic,

If you are between two answer choices on a weakening question like this one, ask yourself if the answer choice is actually incompatible with the existing argument. In this case, if we add in answer choice (D) to what the stimulus tells us, does it actually weaken the argument? The stimulus says water sourcing issues will not plague humans in the near future. If you say that eventually we will strip the Earth of it's natural resources that's fine - that in no way weakens the author's argument that the water will not be an issue in the next few decades. Those two statements can coexist and the argument still stands.

In comparison, answer choice (B) presents information that shows that some people on Earth will likely have issues accessing water in the near future. Adding that information into the stimulus significantly weakens the conclusion that water will not be an issue.

To answer your first question, identifying the conclusion and premise and nuance within a stimulus is increasingly important as the question difficulty increases. You might still get some problems correct, but correctly identifying the conclusion is critical to success so I would practice this ahead of test day.

Hope that helps!

Get the most out of your LSAT Prep Plus subscription.

Analyze and track your performance with our Testing and Analytics Package.