- Fri Sep 01, 2017 12:43 pm
#39084
Let's see if that works here, mN2mmvf, by pulling just those two sentences out of the argument to see if they make a coherent argument on their own:
Premise: people realize that sophisticated technologies deeply affect the quality of human relations
Conclusion: the more technologically advanced a society is, the more aware its members are of technology's drawbacks
I'm not seeing the connection here. How does realizing that tech affects quality lead to the direct proportional claim about drawbacks? If this was presented to you all by itself as an LR stimulus, would you think this was a good argument, or would you say that the evidence has no bearing on the conclusion? I would lean towards the latter.
Perhaps equally important to your analysis here, though, is that the statement in question is most definitely a premise, introduced by the word "because", which supports the main conclusion. That is its primary function, and so we need to include a description of that function in our answer about what role it plays.
On the LSAT, answer choices that describe intermediate or subordinate conclusions will almost always talk about both roles played by that statement. They will say things like "it is a conclusion supported by another claim, and which in turn supports the main conclusion" or "it is a conclusion of the argument, but not the main conclusion" or "it receives support from one claim and supports another", etc. That pattern is fairly consistent on the LSAT. While it might be possible for an answer describing a subordinate conclusion to mention only the conclusion aspect of the claim, without mentioning the premise aspect (I don't recall ever seeing one like that, but I'll concede that it may have happened), for that to be a correct answer there would have to be no other answer that also described its role as a premise. Here, answer B describes that other role, and since there cannot be two equally correct answers to an LSAT question (the "uniqueness principle" of answers), one of them must be incorrect. The premise role is obvious; the subordinate conclusion role, if it exists, is very subtle. The premise answer is better, and thus is the credited response.
I hope that helps with your attack on future Method-AP questions like this one!
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
Follow me on Twitter at
https://twitter.com/LSATadam