- Fri Jan 21, 2011 12:00 am
#23125
Complete Question Explanation
Method of Reasoning-CE. The correct answer choice is (E)
In this dialogue, the legislator draws a questionable causal conclusion. Based on the fact that certain areas have experienced a significant decrease in crime, and that those areas are covered by new, more punishing laws, the author asserts that the laws caused the decrease in crime. The author's conclusion can be diagrammed as follows:
The question stem asks for the analyst's method of reasoning in attacking the legislator's argument. The analyst point to other examples lacking the cause where the effect still took place.
Answer choice (A) This is a common sort of wrong answer choice in LSAT questions like this one. The analyst does not question the validity of the statistics, but rather the legislator's interpretation of those statistics, so this answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (B) While this would represent a causal flaw, this is not what happens in this stimulus. The analyst does not argue that both the law change and the crime drop resulted from the same cause, so this answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (C) This answer choice is incorrect for reason similar to that of answer choice (A) above. The objection is not to the statistics, but to the legislator's interpretation of those statistics.
Answer choice (D) The analyst raises no objection based on self-interest, so this answer choice is perhaps the most clearly incorrect.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. This choice describes, in slightly more sophisticated terms, the answer prephrased above: the analyst questions the legislator's causal conclusion based on instances when the supposed effect occurs in the absence of the alleged cause.
Method of Reasoning-CE. The correct answer choice is (E)
In this dialogue, the legislator draws a questionable causal conclusion. Based on the fact that certain areas have experienced a significant decrease in crime, and that those areas are covered by new, more punishing laws, the author asserts that the laws caused the decrease in crime. The author's conclusion can be diagrammed as follows:
- Cause Effect
Laws Decrease in crime rate
The question stem asks for the analyst's method of reasoning in attacking the legislator's argument. The analyst point to other examples lacking the cause where the effect still took place.
Answer choice (A) This is a common sort of wrong answer choice in LSAT questions like this one. The analyst does not question the validity of the statistics, but rather the legislator's interpretation of those statistics, so this answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (B) While this would represent a causal flaw, this is not what happens in this stimulus. The analyst does not argue that both the law change and the crime drop resulted from the same cause, so this answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (C) This answer choice is incorrect for reason similar to that of answer choice (A) above. The objection is not to the statistics, but to the legislator's interpretation of those statistics.
Answer choice (D) The analyst raises no objection based on self-interest, so this answer choice is perhaps the most clearly incorrect.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. This choice describes, in slightly more sophisticated terms, the answer prephrased above: the analyst questions the legislator's causal conclusion based on instances when the supposed effect occurs in the absence of the alleged cause.