- Wed Nov 08, 2017 6:03 pm
#41455
Is it same to assume that you can eliminate answer choices that use the word "many" similarly?
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If it is cost prohibitive to recycle the manufacturer will just keep making new plastic bottles from virgin materials with whatever code number people want to buy.If that is the case, than the consumers would still be driving manufacturers to make plastic bottles that are more easily recycled rather than bottles that are not recyclable.
kyunglt wrote:I'm sorry. I don't think that C. is correct. The author discusses "disposable" plastic containers with the lower numbered ones have the highest likelihood of being recycled, rather than being dumped in a landfill. The author is not arguing about plastics that have already been recycled. The author contends that because the lower numbered plastics are more likely to be recycled, consumers should refuse to purchase the plastics with the higher-labeled codes. The weaken to that is, how can they refuse to buy the higher coded plastics, if they don't know about the codes? I think somebody dropped the ball on this one.I'll try to post a more comprehensive answer explaining what's happening here, but it may take a while. In the meantime, there is no error in this problem, and the correct answer is wholly defensible. Is it an easy answer to spot? No, not at all—this is a tough problem! But there's no flaw here, and the various PowerScore explanations within this lengthy thread do a good job of talking about why that is In the meantime, focus on why this answer is right as opposed to wrong, because ultimately, no matter what your or my personal take on this question is, the people who make the test say it's correct, and You Can't Argue With the LSAT.
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