- Tue May 10, 2016 5:15 pm
#24322
Hello
So this is another instance where the issue of analogy and example has shown up on the LSAT and I'm still having trouble with it. So I know Robert or Adam had responded and said that an example is something that is very specific and an analogy is comparing things that are broad. For this reason I choose answer choice E the correct answer choice was B
So Helen says that "reading a book is the intellectual equivalent of investing money. Great, this is the analogy, I see that.
But the question stem asks how Randi replies to Helen's argument. Randi says: But that applies ONLY to vocational books. Reading fiction is like watching a sitcom:its just wasted time. How is this not an example He is differentiating between reading fiction and vocational books. Vocational books is a specific example of a type of book?
Thankyou
Sarah
So this is another instance where the issue of analogy and example has shown up on the LSAT and I'm still having trouble with it. So I know Robert or Adam had responded and said that an example is something that is very specific and an analogy is comparing things that are broad. For this reason I choose answer choice E the correct answer choice was B
So Helen says that "reading a book is the intellectual equivalent of investing money. Great, this is the analogy, I see that.
But the question stem asks how Randi replies to Helen's argument. Randi says: But that applies ONLY to vocational books. Reading fiction is like watching a sitcom:its just wasted time. How is this not an example He is differentiating between reading fiction and vocational books. Vocational books is a specific example of a type of book?
Thankyou
Sarah