- Sat Oct 01, 2016 2:17 pm
#29476
I think you are reading into the stimulus claims that are not there. The author never says that an effective campaign will lead to higher sales, but only that the particular campaign under discussion would be ineffective and would not lead to higher sales. Don't make a mistaken negation yourself in attempting to describe the author's flaw! Your analysis of both D and E appears to be based on your own mistaken negation.
Ill conceived means bad, ineffective, not well done, so it is indeed referring to LRG getting bad advice.
There is some reasonable debate here about who this competitor is that we are referring to in answer A - a competitor of LRG, or the competing consultant that the author referred to in the stimulus. Let's give the benefit of the doubt here and assume that it is the latter, and that Answer A is referring to the ad campaign that LRG went with against the advice of our author.
In that case, Answer A might indeed describe a problem with the argument, similar to what we often see in Resolve the Paradox questions about a surprisingly bad result (the resolution being that things would have been even worse if not for the X factor in the stimulus, such as the fantastic detective or doctor that always gets the worst cases having the worst success record but still being considered the best in the business). Our author may have assumed, without justification, that the ad campaign did not help boost sales. But then again, he didn't argue that the ad campaign would not help sales relative to doing nothing - he argued that the campaign would not be effective overall, and he went on to tell us that sales were especially poor after the campaign ran. Sounds to me like an ineffective ad campaign, regardless of what might have been worse. So if A is a flaw, it's not a big one, because it isn't really central to his argument.
Now remember, we are in the business on the LSAT of picking not good answers, or acceptable answers, but the BEST answer (of the five presented). Is A a flaw? Yes, maybe, somewhat. Is it the biggest problem? No way, not by far. B describes the big gaping hole in the argument, the failure to consider alternate causes for the poor sales.
For those of you who second-guessed your alternate cause prephrase, don't do that. B is a perfect match and ever so much more powerful than whatever is going on with A. The authors pulled a fast one on you there, but if you go in with a strong mind and a solid prephrase you should not fall prey to their tricks. Sure, keep A as a contender, but when you get to B you should absolutely love it and throw A onto the junk pile pretty confidently.
Ill conceived means bad, ineffective, not well done, so it is indeed referring to LRG getting bad advice.
There is some reasonable debate here about who this competitor is that we are referring to in answer A - a competitor of LRG, or the competing consultant that the author referred to in the stimulus. Let's give the benefit of the doubt here and assume that it is the latter, and that Answer A is referring to the ad campaign that LRG went with against the advice of our author.
In that case, Answer A might indeed describe a problem with the argument, similar to what we often see in Resolve the Paradox questions about a surprisingly bad result (the resolution being that things would have been even worse if not for the X factor in the stimulus, such as the fantastic detective or doctor that always gets the worst cases having the worst success record but still being considered the best in the business). Our author may have assumed, without justification, that the ad campaign did not help boost sales. But then again, he didn't argue that the ad campaign would not help sales relative to doing nothing - he argued that the campaign would not be effective overall, and he went on to tell us that sales were especially poor after the campaign ran. Sounds to me like an ineffective ad campaign, regardless of what might have been worse. So if A is a flaw, it's not a big one, because it isn't really central to his argument.
Now remember, we are in the business on the LSAT of picking not good answers, or acceptable answers, but the BEST answer (of the five presented). Is A a flaw? Yes, maybe, somewhat. Is it the biggest problem? No way, not by far. B describes the big gaping hole in the argument, the failure to consider alternate causes for the poor sales.
For those of you who second-guessed your alternate cause prephrase, don't do that. B is a perfect match and ever so much more powerful than whatever is going on with A. The authors pulled a fast one on you there, but if you go in with a strong mind and a solid prephrase you should not fall prey to their tricks. Sure, keep A as a contender, but when you get to B you should absolutely love it and throw A onto the junk pile pretty confidently.
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