- Tue Feb 19, 2019 7:59 pm
#62789
I'm not entirely sure what your diagram represents here, LSAT2018. Does the word "experience" in each of these diagrams mean "that is what we experience"? Or "that is what is presented for us to experience"? Or maybe "that is what is relevant to our experience"?
I think your basic understanding of the argument is solid here, and your prephrase was good - we are probably looking for some connection between the intrinsic aspects of an artwork and our direct (non-symbolic) experience of it. So, it's a painting of a fish, and we should base our aesthetic appreciation of the painting on the "fishness" of it, and not on whatever the fish might symbolize (mortality, material goods, your mother, etc.)
Because this is question 24, rather than question 4, we can expect things to be a bit more complex, so the answer may not be so obvious as "the intrinsic aspects of a work of art are the only things that are directly presented to us in that work of art", or some such thing. That's what makes answer A so tricky, and also, imo, makes answer C so attractive. C is straightforward, clear, easy...but it fails to create a new connection in the argument, and only repeats what was already given. That can't justify the conclusion! Answer A, though, makes the new connection in a subtle and confusing way - if symbolism is limited to the extrinsic properties, then the intrinsic ones must have no symbolism, and are therefore no more than whatever they directly present to us. It's just a fish, not a symbol for mother. That's what we were looking for, but not in the way we expected to find it.
Mike, I realize this is a long time overdue, and I apologize that we apparently never answered your question! There are many arguments with multiple conclusions, and those usually come in the form of intermediate (or subordinate) conclusions, which are conclusions based on some premises and which, in turn, support the main conclusion. For example; "There is a fish in this painting, and fish symbolize mothers, so this painting has symbolism in it. Paintings with symbolism in them are always subject to debate about their meaning, so this painting is subject to such debate." Two conclusions - this painting has symbolism, and this painting is subject to debate - the former is intermediate and supports the latter, which is the main conclusion.
In this argument, though, it's really just one conclusion, but a compound conclusion: it's not one thing, but this other thing. If it is aesthetically relevant, then it is not symbolic and it is what is directly presented. That, too, is a common LSAT structure, and you should track all aspects of the compound conclusions, because the answer could be about either one of them in isolation.
I hope that helps you both, guys!
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
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