- Sun Nov 13, 2011 7:21 pm
#2786
I now understand why the answer is E. My mistake is that I thought that the last sentence was the conclusion. "So it would seem that..." made me feel this way, and that it could be the subsidiary conclusion did not occur to me. That began a process of attempting to attribute some function to the first sentence. I felt that there was a gap between the last sentence and the sentence previous to it. The correlation between requesting less morphine and injured soldiers does not warrant a casual statement that the meaning of the wound would affect the amount of pain one perceives. The correlation could be explained by the fact that the nature of the injury suffered on the battlefield is very different from that suffered by surgery, and hence the pain is really different not merely perceived as different. It then dawned upon me that the first sentence actually could fill in the gap between the last sentence and the rest of the stimulus by stating possible nonphysiological factors. So I ended up choosing A. Could you tell me how I could avoid this mistake in the future? And also is it a safe rule to say that "an assumption" on the LSAT must always be unstated, and can never be traced to a sentence in the stimulus, and that when they ask for the function of a statement, the answer can never be that it is an assumption? Thank you.