- Fri Sep 30, 2016 6:28 pm
#29226
This question fits best in the category of Must Be True, but in fact it is a subset of that question type, Most Strongly Supported. That means that the answer doesn't absolutely HAVE to be true, but it is the one, of the five presented, that has the most support. So here we have to pick an answer that has the most support, even if it may not be true.
What is our author suggesting here? Why not move to the new software? Is he arguing that it is not better, is not more efficient or easier or flexible? No, he's not. He is only arguing that, since other companies found that their employees were reverting to the old product, this company should not switch. We don't know why they stuck with the old one - it could be familiarity, as answer B suggests, but it could be any number of other reasons. Maybe the new stuff is not actually better? Maybe it doesn't live up to the advertisements? Maybe the employees have a grudge or complaint against the company that makes the new product, and they are rebelling by refusing to use their products? Maybe they are all under a magic spell cast by the publisher of the old software?
Answer B requires us to make an assumption that, while reasonable, is not supported by the stimulus as well as answer E. We have evidence that in several other cases, the employees apparently preferred the old to the new, and the manager is projecting that correlation onto his company. Why they prefer it remains unknown, at least to us, but the fact that they do prefer it seems to be what matters.
Here's one more reason to pick E over B - we call it the Uniqueness Principle of Answers. Much like the Highlander, there can be only one right answer. When the truth of one answer forces another answer to be equally true, the one doing the forcing cannot be the correct answer. If B is true - if familiarity is more important than flexibility or initial ease of use - doesn't that also mean that E must be true and that many employees of this company will keep using the old stuff? If you agree that B's truth forces E to also be true, then you must reject answer B. Otherwise you would have two equally valid answers, and the authors of the LSAT try very hard to prevent that from happening (and they are very good at their jobs).
Ponder that and see if it makes sense to you. If not, come back for more - we are always here!
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
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