- Sat Jul 07, 2018 1:33 pm
#47630
That's an easy mistake to make if you're in a hurry, akanshalsat! -148c is 148 degrees below zero, and -160c is 160 degrees below zero. -160c is 12 degrees COLDER than -148c, which means it is lower, not higher! As the numbers get larger on the negative side of the number line (or X axis, if that helps), the amount is getting smaller, not larger.
This illustrates a problem faced by many LSAT students, and that is that we tend to come from a liberal arts background rather than a STEM background. For many of us that means that the last time we took a math class or science class may have been in high school, and we may not be comfortable or well-versed in mathematical or scientific concepts. Given that the LSAT is all too happy to throw scientific jargon, averages, percentages, ratios, biology, physics, and more at us, we need to get used to those concepts again. That doesn't mean they are testing our understanding of math and science, but it does mean they expect us to have a certain level of proficiency and comfort with them. To the extent that we are not proficient and comfortable, it's incumbent upon us to work on that!
This was no accident, akanshalsat! The authors of this test KNEW that the use of negative numbers might cause some folks to make a simple error like that. Be careful, read every word, think about what they mean, and then proceed methodically and cautiously through your prephrase and sorting the answers. Watch out for traps laid for the careless or unwary!
Good luck, and let's be safe out there!
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
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https://twitter.com/LSATadam