- Thu Feb 09, 2017 3:27 pm
#32622
"Many" does not mean the same as "some", amowuya - see my explanation above about the ambiguous nature of many compared to the quantifiable nature of some. That said, "many" does indicate "some", because many, while somewhat vague, certainly means more than zero!
The problem with answer choice E is that we cannot prove many laws from many crimes. Perhaps there is just one law - "honor thy mother and thy father". There could be many crimes flowing from that one law, couldn't there? Some people talk back to their mom - boom, that's a crime! Others forget to give Dad a card on Father's Day - arrest those villains! Still others disobey their parents instructions, or speak poorly about their parents to their peers, or bring home bad grades - all kinds of crimes, and all based on just one law!
Here's another way to determine that E cannot be the credited response, even if it seems to make sense to you at first glance: the Uniqueness PrincipleTM. That principle tells us that only one answer can be the best answer. Like the Highlander, there can be only one. So, if one answer, if it's true, forces another answer to also be true, then the answer doing the forcing cannot be the right answer. If answer E is true - that a society with many crimes has many laws - then mustn't it also be true that a society with some crimes has some laws? Doesn't answer E force answer D to also be true? Since E is doing the forcing, and D can be true even if E is not, then E cannot be the best answer. That principle comes up now and again on this test, and when you have two very similar answers like these it can help you pick the right answer without totally understanding why.
See if that makes sense, and let us know if you need further elaboration. Also, make sure you get your Dad a card on Father's Day.
The problem with answer choice E is that we cannot prove many laws from many crimes. Perhaps there is just one law - "honor thy mother and thy father". There could be many crimes flowing from that one law, couldn't there? Some people talk back to their mom - boom, that's a crime! Others forget to give Dad a card on Father's Day - arrest those villains! Still others disobey their parents instructions, or speak poorly about their parents to their peers, or bring home bad grades - all kinds of crimes, and all based on just one law!
Here's another way to determine that E cannot be the credited response, even if it seems to make sense to you at first glance: the Uniqueness PrincipleTM. That principle tells us that only one answer can be the best answer. Like the Highlander, there can be only one. So, if one answer, if it's true, forces another answer to also be true, then the answer doing the forcing cannot be the right answer. If answer E is true - that a society with many crimes has many laws - then mustn't it also be true that a society with some crimes has some laws? Doesn't answer E force answer D to also be true? Since E is doing the forcing, and D can be true even if E is not, then E cannot be the best answer. That principle comes up now and again on this test, and when you have two very similar answers like these it can help you pick the right answer without totally understanding why.
See if that makes sense, and let us know if you need further elaboration. Also, make sure you get your Dad a card on Father's Day.
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
Follow me on Twitter at https://twitter.com/LSATadam
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
Follow me on Twitter at https://twitter.com/LSATadam