- Sun Aug 12, 2018 12:39 pm
#49431
The tactic being referred to is "impugning the motives of her adversaries." The author says that Roehmer has polarizing national politics because she has been doing that, so apparently our author things that impugning the motives of one's opponents is a bad thing. But then, at the end of the stimulus, the author does the same thing to Roehmer, impugning her motives! The problem with this argument is that the author is a hypocrite!
Lathlee, this is not about the author appealing to his own loyal readers. We have no idea who our author is writing for, or what his motives are. The problem is that he criticized Roehmer for impugning the motives of others, and then he impugned her motives.
Khodi, I do think there has been a shift in recent years towards more abstract questions and answers, and this is a good example of that. It's natural and predictable that the test will evolve over time, for if it did not, then it would get progressively easier as the inventory of questions available for study grew and they were all the same. I think you could look at the test at almost any point in its modern history, after the first five years or so, and see shifts in the types and mixture of questions, the use of language, the introduction of new twists in games, etc. It is always evolving in order to stay challenging, but the same skills are still being tested. We just have to stay sharp and keep honing our logic skills, breaking down arguments into their component pieces, identifying conclusions and structure and method and flaws, and being ready for whatever they throw at us. It's hard, but that's always been the case with the LSAT!
Good luck to you both, keep at it!
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
Follow me on Twitter at
https://twitter.com/LSATadam