- Thu Jul 26, 2012 5:24 pm
#4599
Let me see if I can help here.
The author's argument starts with the premise that when lava solidifies, it magnetizes in the same direction as the Earth's magnetic field. What he never says (and therefore assumes) is that it never changes after that - that once it's solid, it continues to be magnetically orientated the way it was when it started.
If he included a new premise that said "no solidified lava ever changes the direction of its magnetic field", that would make his conclusion much better, in my opinion, and apparently in yours. But just because that would be a great premise, is it necessary that he assume that? Could his argument still be valid if sometimes lava did change it's magnetic direction? Sure - it just just depends on how much. 1% of the time and the argument is still pretty good. 99% of the time, and it stinks.
The stem asks us which assumption is required, and C is absolutely the best of the bunch. You want to know why they didn't include a stronger assumption - that it never changes - to make the argument better? The answer is that an assumption that strong is not required for his argument to work. Sure, it would help a lot if it were true, but it isn't essential. That's why it wrecks the argument, and doesn't just hurt it, when we negate it.
As an experiment, try negating the more extreme assumption you are looking for - no lava changes magnetic direction becomes some lava does. Is the argument weakened? Perhaps. Destroyed? Nope - "some" isn't powerful enough to do that.
Did that help?
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT Instructor
The author's argument starts with the premise that when lava solidifies, it magnetizes in the same direction as the Earth's magnetic field. What he never says (and therefore assumes) is that it never changes after that - that once it's solid, it continues to be magnetically orientated the way it was when it started.
If he included a new premise that said "no solidified lava ever changes the direction of its magnetic field", that would make his conclusion much better, in my opinion, and apparently in yours. But just because that would be a great premise, is it necessary that he assume that? Could his argument still be valid if sometimes lava did change it's magnetic direction? Sure - it just just depends on how much. 1% of the time and the argument is still pretty good. 99% of the time, and it stinks.
The stem asks us which assumption is required, and C is absolutely the best of the bunch. You want to know why they didn't include a stronger assumption - that it never changes - to make the argument better? The answer is that an assumption that strong is not required for his argument to work. Sure, it would help a lot if it were true, but it isn't essential. That's why it wrecks the argument, and doesn't just hurt it, when we negate it.
As an experiment, try negating the more extreme assumption you are looking for - no lava changes magnetic direction becomes some lava does. Is the argument weakened? Perhaps. Destroyed? Nope - "some" isn't powerful enough to do that.
Did that help?
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT Instructor
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