- Tue Mar 27, 2018 6:43 pm
#44562
I'm going to push back again and ask about these viewpoints, lathlee. You say there is a viewpoint of Social Psychologists found in lines 23-37. Who are these social psychologists, and what is their viewpoint? What do they think, feel or believe? You also indicated that each of the three theories has or is a viewpoint. Do those theories think something or believe something? No way - they don't think or feel, because they are just theories! The question you should ask is whether someone or some group that we can identify in the passage thinks, feels, or believes something about those theories. Does someone think one theory is the most accurate? Does some group claim that one of the theories is flawed? That's what viewpoints are - not just the description of an idea or theory, but a judgment about those ideas or theories.
Do it again, and continue to scale it back. You are still going way overboard on these analyses, which will waste time and effort and lead to more confusion rather than greater understanding and accuracy in answering questions. When you say there is a viewpoint, tell me exactly who holds that view and what they think or feel or believe.
Here's what I see:
Political theorists feel that the classical theories are not good because they trivialize the political ends of movement participants.
The author thinks those guys have a point, but that the classical theories all have a place, and there might be a better test that could be applied.
That's it, just two viewpoints in the whole passage. We might get asked how the author feels about the political theorists, or what they agree about, or what they disagree about. We might get asked to identify one of those viewpoints (see question 24).
This is not to say that we don't need to pay attention to the differences in the three classical theories - to the contrary, question 23 tests your understanding of the key differences between two of them. What I am saying is that there is a difference between being given some data and being given an opinion about that data. Viewpoints are opinions, thoughts, feelings, while data is just...data. We don't get questioned about data in the same way we get questioned about viewpoints, so confusing one for another is, in addition to wasteful of time and effort, likely to lead to greater difficulty in answering the questions.
Keep it simpler, lathlee! Try again, and keep it simple. We can talk about the structure and arguments analysis after you take another swing at it. When you do, if you are going to call something an argument, you have to be able to identify the premises and conclusions of the argument and be prepared to strengthen or weaken them. A theory is not necessarily, by itself, an argument, at least not in the LSAT sense, because it may present only a claim with no premises to support it. We might get asked for something that will make the theory more or less likely to be correct, which would be a strengthen or weaken question, but that doesn't mean the theory is, as presented, an argument for our purposes.
Adam M. Tyson
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