- Thu Jun 09, 2016 4:35 pm
#26340
Complete Question Explanation
(See the complete passage discussion here: lsat/viewtopic.php?t=10953)
The correct answer choice is (D)
Due to the general nature of this question, the method of elimination is likely to prove useful—any answer choice that cannot be proven by the passage will be incorrect.
Answer choice (A): Although the amount of time people spend driving is clearly a factor that affects community life, the New Urbanists never stated that it is the primary factor affecting a neighborhood’s conduciveness to the maintenance of civility.
Answer choice (B): Whether citizens can influence the long-term effects of zoning policies is not an issue discussed in the passage.
Answer choice (C): This is the Opposite answer. The New Urbanists are unlikely to view commuting to urban centers as unnecessary for finding an easily accessible job. On the contrary: suburban residents are forced to drive to their places of employment, often in heavy traffic.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. On one hand, the spatial configuration of suburban neighborhoods influences the attitudes of those who live in them (it makes them antisocial, as discussed in lines 30-35). On the other hand, suburban sprawl is influenced by the attitudes of residents who value their autonomy and independence (lines 46-50).
Answer choice (E): This answer choice contains an exaggeration. The New Urbanists never argued that personal values should not affect the ways in which neighborhoods are designed. They merely warn that these values should not be absolute (lines 55-59).
(See the complete passage discussion here: lsat/viewtopic.php?t=10953)
The correct answer choice is (D)
Due to the general nature of this question, the method of elimination is likely to prove useful—any answer choice that cannot be proven by the passage will be incorrect.
Answer choice (A): Although the amount of time people spend driving is clearly a factor that affects community life, the New Urbanists never stated that it is the primary factor affecting a neighborhood’s conduciveness to the maintenance of civility.
Answer choice (B): Whether citizens can influence the long-term effects of zoning policies is not an issue discussed in the passage.
Answer choice (C): This is the Opposite answer. The New Urbanists are unlikely to view commuting to urban centers as unnecessary for finding an easily accessible job. On the contrary: suburban residents are forced to drive to their places of employment, often in heavy traffic.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. On one hand, the spatial configuration of suburban neighborhoods influences the attitudes of those who live in them (it makes them antisocial, as discussed in lines 30-35). On the other hand, suburban sprawl is influenced by the attitudes of residents who value their autonomy and independence (lines 46-50).
Answer choice (E): This answer choice contains an exaggeration. The New Urbanists never argued that personal values should not affect the ways in which neighborhoods are designed. They merely warn that these values should not be absolute (lines 55-59).