- Wed Feb 07, 2018 5:39 pm
#43688
I have read this thread carefully but still, I am not convinced by any of the explanations provided. In fact, I have come to the conclusion that either the LSAT author made an error in translating the meaning from the statement in answer choice A (or some other error in the question) or we have stumbled upon some sort of paradoxically nuanced aspect of the English language that the LSAT author has no business probing in an LSAT. Please, if you can, help me understand what I am missing.
The cafeteria patron's argument does not depend on the apples being washed. In fact, it appears that the patron's argument requires that the apples are not washed (or else the cafeteria wouldn't be selling pesticide covered fruit and endangering its patrons). Choice A is the probably the best choice since it states the apples are not washed after harvest. However, the language used suggests that the phrase "not washed after harvest" actually means something like, "not washed immediately after harvest"--or at least, the phrasing certainly does NOT suggest an absolute (i.e. "the apples were not washed anytime after harvest" since "anytime after harvest" means "after harvest"). Instead, "after" is used as a relative term comparing some segment of time beginning after event 1 to another segment of time ending before event 2. The meaning of the answer choice statement is something like, the apples were washed between harvesting and arriving at the cafeteria and perhaps closer to point in which they arrived at the cafeteria than to the point in which harvesting concluded. In essence, answer choice A means the apples were washed, which would clearly undermine the patron's argument or at the very least it is not an assumption on which the patron's argument depends. The only explanation I can come up with, although it is very, very charitable to the LSAT author--and still doesn't work well, is that answer choice A means something like, the apples were washed before harvest (the result of combining "the apples were not washed after harvest" and "the apples were washed before reaching the cafeteria"). Even still, to say the argument depends on the fruit being washed before harvest is a stretch. If the fruit were washed, they would have to be washed not just before harvest, but more specifically before the pesticide was sprayed for the last time for the apples to endanger the patrons. If you break it down into a conditional statement, as one of the instructors did earlier, I get something like, If it is one of the cafetaria's apples it was not washed after harvesting AND it was washed before reaching the cafeteria. The contrapositive could be: if the apple is washed after harvest or it was not washed before reaching the cafeteria it is not the cafeteria's apple--OR--maybe it could be: if the apple is not washed before harvest or it was washed after reaching the cafeteria it is not the cafeteria's apple). In both translations, the apple appears to be necessarily washed, in which case, if it were washed before the pesticide were sprayed, the patron's arguement is invalid.
I feel like I am losing my mind, but it is very important to me that I don't skip over questions I don't understand. Please, explain to me otherwise.