- Sat Mar 19, 2016 11:00 pm
#34984
Complete Question Explanation
(See the complete passage discussion here: lsat/viewtopic.php?t=14161)
The correct answer choice is (B)
Purpose questions introducing a Specific Reference usually require a more complete understanding
of the context in which the referenced text appears, and are best approached with an active prephrase.
This question asks us to describe the purpose of the fourth paragraph, which is prephrased in the
VIEWSTAMP analysis above: to present an explanation of the Pin Factory model’s long-standing
failure to gain prominence among economists. Note the rhetorical question “Why?” in line 38, which
should help you focus on the relevant issue at hand. In addition, recall that Warsh’s argument is
inherently explanatory, not descriptive, suggesting that the correct answer choice is more likely to
contain keywords such as “explain” or “clarify,” rather than “outline” or “describe.”
Answer choice (A): The author neither describes, nor critiques, any theory purporting to resolve the
tensions between the Pin Factory and the Invisible Hand models.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice, as it most closely agrees with our prephrase.
Note that the degree of generality inherent in such descriptions can vary considerably, and should
not, by itself, serve as a reason to reject a particular answer choice.
Answer choice (C): This is an attractive answer choice, especially since the author does mention
some of the qualities that made the Invisible Hand model particularly attractive (it lends itself
more easily to “elegant formalism”). However, the purpose of the paragraph is not to outline these
qualities, but rather to explain why the Pin Factory model has been de-emphasized (line 38).
The “intuitions” in question are only outlined in so far as they help explain why one economic
assumption has dominated economic theory at the expense of another.
Answer choice (D): The fourth paragraph describes what caused economists to model one economic
assumption over another, not what tensions resulted from their attempts.
Answer choice (E): No particular argument is refuted in the fourth paragraph, or in the passage as a
whole.
(See the complete passage discussion here: lsat/viewtopic.php?t=14161)
The correct answer choice is (B)
Purpose questions introducing a Specific Reference usually require a more complete understanding
of the context in which the referenced text appears, and are best approached with an active prephrase.
This question asks us to describe the purpose of the fourth paragraph, which is prephrased in the
VIEWSTAMP analysis above: to present an explanation of the Pin Factory model’s long-standing
failure to gain prominence among economists. Note the rhetorical question “Why?” in line 38, which
should help you focus on the relevant issue at hand. In addition, recall that Warsh’s argument is
inherently explanatory, not descriptive, suggesting that the correct answer choice is more likely to
contain keywords such as “explain” or “clarify,” rather than “outline” or “describe.”
Answer choice (A): The author neither describes, nor critiques, any theory purporting to resolve the
tensions between the Pin Factory and the Invisible Hand models.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice, as it most closely agrees with our prephrase.
Note that the degree of generality inherent in such descriptions can vary considerably, and should
not, by itself, serve as a reason to reject a particular answer choice.
Answer choice (C): This is an attractive answer choice, especially since the author does mention
some of the qualities that made the Invisible Hand model particularly attractive (it lends itself
more easily to “elegant formalism”). However, the purpose of the paragraph is not to outline these
qualities, but rather to explain why the Pin Factory model has been de-emphasized (line 38).
The “intuitions” in question are only outlined in so far as they help explain why one economic
assumption has dominated economic theory at the expense of another.
Answer choice (D): The fourth paragraph describes what caused economists to model one economic
assumption over another, not what tensions resulted from their attempts.
Answer choice (E): No particular argument is refuted in the fourth paragraph, or in the passage as a
whole.