- Thu Apr 12, 2018 6:49 pm
#44953
To be clear, martinbeslu, the correct answer here is B, not A. I wasn't sure from your post if you had that or if there was some confusion.
There are a few things going on in your analysis that deserve some attention, and I think the first is to look at the difference between a Strengthen question, like this one ("most supports" the argument) and a Justify the Conclusion question (where the answer proves the conclusion). Answer B does not justify the conclusion, but it helps, because it links TV causally to violence in society. Sure, there may not have been much violence on TV back when folks started getting TVs, but at least answer B is telling us that something on TV does cause, and is not caused by, societal violence. It doesn't matter that it falls far short of proving the conclusion, because this is only a Strengthen question. All we have to do is help. Answer B helps, without making any additional assumptions or bringing in any outside info.
On the flip side, you're giving way too much help to answer E! Perhaps you are right that watching TV qualifies as leisure time, but where do we get the information that watching TV increases your leisure time? Maybe we just swap out the time we would have been doing something else for TV time? That's not an assumption - I'm not saying that DID happen, or that it must be the case - but a consideration that shows that answer E requires additional information that was not given to us. We don't know anything about an increase in leisure time, only about TVs showing up in homes. The correct answer will help the argument all by itself, with no additional info, and answer E needs more before it gets there.
Answer A is wrong for a couple of reasons. First, the number of programs doesn't seem relevant, because it could be more about the simple presence of TV, or perhaps the level of violence in a given program. More importantly, in my opinion, is that this answer only tells us something about a further correlation, without telling us whether it's causal. That might help some - where the cause is less, the effect is less, perhaps - but since answer B is directly causal it is much stronger than whatever answer A's mere correlation can do for us. Remember to pick the one that does the most to support the claim, not just one that might support it some! A further correlation is never going to be as powerful as a direct claim of causality.
Take another look and let us know if that makes it clearer! Keep up the good work!
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
Follow me on Twitter at
https://twitter.com/LSATadam