- Wed Jul 22, 2015 4:20 pm
#19153
I think you may be looking for a more destructive answer than needed here, Anthony. Focus on the conclusion - that it is more likely that an actuary did it than an accountant. Anything that weakens that, no matter how little, still weakens it. You're right that the numbers issue raised by answer C doesn't do much damage, but does it do some? I think so - the accountants outnumbering the actuaries 4 to 1, or even the fact that there are only 2 actuaries, should make you think that the likelihood that an actuary did it is slightly less than the author may have believed, based purely on the statistical odds. We don't have to destroy the argument, or even do major damage, to say we have weakened it - even the tiniest seed of doubt is typically enough.
If you don't like that approach, then consider this - on the LSAT we are in the business of picking the BEST answer (as opposed to the RIGHT answer or a GOOD answer). That means we want to pick the best of the bunch, no matter how awful it might be or how good another answer might be. Answer D here is the best of the bunch, because it has absolutely zero impact on the conclusion - it doesn't do anything to call into question the claim that an actuary is the more likely culprit. Since it does nothing to weaken the argument, and C might do at least a small amount of damage, D has to be the credited response and C has to be a loser. Don't focus on how bad an answer C is - instead, focus on how much better an answer D is. With that mindset you won't ever get caught up in nitpicking answers that you don't like, something we all can fall prey to now and then.
I hope that helps! Best of luck in your studies.
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
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