- PowerScore Staff
- Posts: 5972
- Joined: Mar 25, 2011
- Mon Oct 24, 2011 12:18 pm
#2155
Finally, in reference to June 2001, Section 2, Question #25 (the wood-burning stoves question), I think the problem here is with your assessment of the stimulus and answer choice (C). Let's look at each answer you mentioned briefly:
Answer choice (C): I don't see this as "cause with no effect." This would be better stated as "open fireplaces have effects that you failed to consider that are more severe than wood-burning fireplaces." Again, I believe that what you are doing is seeing elements of causality and then painting the whole problem with a simplified picture of what is occurring. In this case, the author focuses on one aspect of stoves/fireplaces: chimneys. On the basis of an analysis of chimney danger only, wood-burning stoves are said to be more dangerous. But is a chimney the only aspect of a stove/fireplace? No, and (C) points this out. When the author says in a wholesale way that "wood-burning stoves...are more dangerous," then the arguments can't be limited by "in the home" because that's part of the stove/fireplace environment.
In many respects, what's occurred here on your part is extremely similar to the tides/gravity question earlier in this thread. There, you missed the "induce" aspect and tried to make a causal argument about the whole relationship. To survive these questions you have to read the entire relationship and not focus in on just one part of it. When you do focus just on certain elements and ignore important elements, your chances of missing the problem rise dramatically.
Another issue is that you keep trying to argue with the test makers. While I can surely understand that desire , you have to stop doing that and instead start seeing the world from their perspective. When you miss a problem, instead of arguing for your answer as correct and theirs as wrong, you need to simply accept that they say you are wrong and start trying to understand why they think they are right. You somewhat came to see their point near the end of your post but you still wanted to argue out the "inside the home" limit instead of stopping and understanding why that wasn't relevant. If you focus on their viewpoint, you will find that many of the problems start to fall into recognizable categories. That said, on to the other two answers.
Answer choice (B): This answer doesn't tell us anything. Sure it depends on certain factors, but what does that means for open fireplaces or stoves? It could help or hurt, and that type of answer is never correct in a Weaken question.
Answer choice (A): This is a tricky answer because at first glance you might think it counters the argument. But the argument was based on "the smoke that wood-burning stoves release up the chimney is cooler...and travels more slowly and deposits more creosote (italics added for emphasis)." So, while according to (A) it may start out with less creosote than the open fireplace, because the smoke is cooler and travels more slowly, it can ultimately leave more of a deposit. The author can therefore easily counter this answer.
Please let me know if that helps. Thanks!
Answer choice (C): I don't see this as "cause with no effect." This would be better stated as "open fireplaces have effects that you failed to consider that are more severe than wood-burning fireplaces." Again, I believe that what you are doing is seeing elements of causality and then painting the whole problem with a simplified picture of what is occurring. In this case, the author focuses on one aspect of stoves/fireplaces: chimneys. On the basis of an analysis of chimney danger only, wood-burning stoves are said to be more dangerous. But is a chimney the only aspect of a stove/fireplace? No, and (C) points this out. When the author says in a wholesale way that "wood-burning stoves...are more dangerous," then the arguments can't be limited by "in the home" because that's part of the stove/fireplace environment.
In many respects, what's occurred here on your part is extremely similar to the tides/gravity question earlier in this thread. There, you missed the "induce" aspect and tried to make a causal argument about the whole relationship. To survive these questions you have to read the entire relationship and not focus in on just one part of it. When you do focus just on certain elements and ignore important elements, your chances of missing the problem rise dramatically.
Another issue is that you keep trying to argue with the test makers. While I can surely understand that desire , you have to stop doing that and instead start seeing the world from their perspective. When you miss a problem, instead of arguing for your answer as correct and theirs as wrong, you need to simply accept that they say you are wrong and start trying to understand why they think they are right. You somewhat came to see their point near the end of your post but you still wanted to argue out the "inside the home" limit instead of stopping and understanding why that wasn't relevant. If you focus on their viewpoint, you will find that many of the problems start to fall into recognizable categories. That said, on to the other two answers.
Answer choice (B): This answer doesn't tell us anything. Sure it depends on certain factors, but what does that means for open fireplaces or stoves? It could help or hurt, and that type of answer is never correct in a Weaken question.
Answer choice (A): This is a tricky answer because at first glance you might think it counters the argument. But the argument was based on "the smoke that wood-burning stoves release up the chimney is cooler...and travels more slowly and deposits more creosote (italics added for emphasis)." So, while according to (A) it may start out with less creosote than the open fireplace, because the smoke is cooler and travels more slowly, it can ultimately leave more of a deposit. The author can therefore easily counter this answer.
Please let me know if that helps. Thanks!
Dave Killoran
PowerScore Test Preparation
Follow me on X/Twitter at http://twitter.com/DaveKilloran
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PowerScore Test Preparation
Follow me on X/Twitter at http://twitter.com/DaveKilloran
My LSAT Articles: http://blog.powerscore.com/lsat/author/dave-killoran
PowerScore Podcast: http://www.powerscore.com/lsat/podcast/