- Mon Aug 19, 2013 11:00 pm
#33601
Complete Question Explanation
(See the complete passage discussion here: lsat/viewtopic.php?t=13775)
The correct answer choice is (B)
As with Question 5, the general nature of the question stem makes it difficult to arrive at a precise prephrase. Instead, try the process of elimination: any answer choice that cannot be proven by the passage will be incorrect.
Answer choice (A): Farmers are encouraged to grow only the crops requested by clients, but no guarantee is ever made that the clients will get the produce they want.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. In the last paragraph, the author describes how Whatley reverses the traditional view of hard-surfaced roads as farm-to-market roads, calling them instead “city-to-farm” roads (lines 44-46). It is reasonable to conclude, then, that these roads are traditionally the means by which farmers transport their produce to the cities.
Answer choice (C): A typical 25-acre farm needs a CMC with 1,000 members, not a population center of 1,000 people. The author never suggested that a population center of 50,000 can support fifty farms with CMCs. Test-makers are quite fond of “tricking” you with numbers: pay close attention to what they mean, and what they don’t.
Answer choice (D): There are probably quite a few reasons why consumers would prefer hard-surfaced roads to other roads. No specific reason for their preference is mentioned in the passage.
Answer choice (E): While hard-surfaced roads are traditionally the means by which farmers transported their produce, the roads were not necessarily intended for farmers. Some might have been, but we have no way of proving that by relying solely on the information contained in the passage.
(See the complete passage discussion here: lsat/viewtopic.php?t=13775)
The correct answer choice is (B)
As with Question 5, the general nature of the question stem makes it difficult to arrive at a precise prephrase. Instead, try the process of elimination: any answer choice that cannot be proven by the passage will be incorrect.
Answer choice (A): Farmers are encouraged to grow only the crops requested by clients, but no guarantee is ever made that the clients will get the produce they want.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. In the last paragraph, the author describes how Whatley reverses the traditional view of hard-surfaced roads as farm-to-market roads, calling them instead “city-to-farm” roads (lines 44-46). It is reasonable to conclude, then, that these roads are traditionally the means by which farmers transport their produce to the cities.
Answer choice (C): A typical 25-acre farm needs a CMC with 1,000 members, not a population center of 1,000 people. The author never suggested that a population center of 50,000 can support fifty farms with CMCs. Test-makers are quite fond of “tricking” you with numbers: pay close attention to what they mean, and what they don’t.
Answer choice (D): There are probably quite a few reasons why consumers would prefer hard-surfaced roads to other roads. No specific reason for their preference is mentioned in the passage.
Answer choice (E): While hard-surfaced roads are traditionally the means by which farmers transported their produce, the roads were not necessarily intended for farmers. Some might have been, but we have no way of proving that by relying solely on the information contained in the passage.