- Sat Feb 04, 2017 11:13 am
#32454
Complete Question Explanation
Strengthen—CE. The correct answer choice is (D)
Here, the author discusses ice cream taste test results. For chocolate ice cream, people like the low-fat version just as much as full-fat chocolate ice cream. The same is not true for vanilla. People do not like low-fat vanilla as much as full-fat, citing low-fat vanilla’s harsher taste.
To explain this difference, the author points out that about 500 distinct chemical compounds produce the chocolate flavor, making it a very complex flavor. The author concludes that “this complexity probably masks any difference in taste due to the lack of fat.” This is a causal conclusion, which we can diagram as:
Complexity = complexity of the chocolate flavor
Difference = difference in taste due the lack of fact
Cause Effect
Complexity Difference
As with all causal conclusions on the LSAT, this conclusion is flawed. Here, the flaw is treating correlation as if it were causation. The author sees that chocolate has these two characteristics, flavor complexity and the taste test results, and infers that one causes the other. The author hedges a bit, saying the flavor complexity is probably the cause. Still, because there is not enough evidence to reach even that probabilistic conclusion, the argument is flawed.
We know from the question stem that this is a Strengthen question, so the correct answer choice will support the author’s causal conclusion. We take as fact that chocolate has a very complex flavor, and that the taste tests showed people liked low-fat chocolate ice cream as much as full-fat ice cream. We will not attack those facts. Instead we focus on the causality, that it is the complexity of the flavor that masks any difference in taste between low-fat and full-fat chocolate ice cream, and not something else.
There are several ways the answer choice could do this, and it does not benefit you to try to predict in advance what the correct answer choice will say. Instead, focus on two main ideas. First, an answer choice that rejects a possible alternate cause will strengthen the conclusion, while an answer that raises an alternate cause will weaken it.
Next, an answer choice that supports the regularity of the relationship between flavor complexity and masking differences in taste will support the conclusion. Here, the stimulus gives us a hint about what we can look for. The author raised the case of vanilla ice cream, but did not let us know whether vanilla, like chocolate, is a complex flavor. Since people do notice the difference between low-fat and full-fat vanilla ice cream, the correct answer could support the conclusion by telling us that vanilla is not a complex flavor. In other words, when the purported cause is absent, then the effect is absent too.
Answer choice (A): This comparison between full-fat chocolate and full-fat vanilla ice cream is not relevant to the author’s causal conclusion. We are looking for something to do with flavor complexity and masking a difference in taste.
Answer choice (B): Nothing in the stimulus told us that the test subjects’ knowledge of the difference in fat content would impact their taste preferences. So this answer will have no effect on the conclusion.
Answer choice (C): This answer choice is getting closer to what we need, because it references flavor complexity. However, it makes a comparison that is beside the point. Our concern is with the complexity of a flavor masking a difference in taste. The choice tells us that the more complex a taste, the better people like it.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice, because it addresses the regularity of the relationship between the cause and effect described in the conclusion. The stimulus told us that people did notice the difference between full-fat and low-fat vanilla ice cream. In the context of the causal conclusion, this evidence told us the effect was absent (Difference). This answer choice tells us that vanilla is not a complex flavor, meaning the cause is absent too (Complex). So, when the cause is absent, the effect is also absent, supporting the author’s causal conclusion.
Answer choice (E): As with answer choice (B), we have no reason to think that people’s knowledge impacts the causal relationship.
Strengthen—CE. The correct answer choice is (D)
Here, the author discusses ice cream taste test results. For chocolate ice cream, people like the low-fat version just as much as full-fat chocolate ice cream. The same is not true for vanilla. People do not like low-fat vanilla as much as full-fat, citing low-fat vanilla’s harsher taste.
To explain this difference, the author points out that about 500 distinct chemical compounds produce the chocolate flavor, making it a very complex flavor. The author concludes that “this complexity probably masks any difference in taste due to the lack of fat.” This is a causal conclusion, which we can diagram as:
Complexity = complexity of the chocolate flavor
Difference = difference in taste due the lack of fact
Cause Effect
Complexity Difference
As with all causal conclusions on the LSAT, this conclusion is flawed. Here, the flaw is treating correlation as if it were causation. The author sees that chocolate has these two characteristics, flavor complexity and the taste test results, and infers that one causes the other. The author hedges a bit, saying the flavor complexity is probably the cause. Still, because there is not enough evidence to reach even that probabilistic conclusion, the argument is flawed.
We know from the question stem that this is a Strengthen question, so the correct answer choice will support the author’s causal conclusion. We take as fact that chocolate has a very complex flavor, and that the taste tests showed people liked low-fat chocolate ice cream as much as full-fat ice cream. We will not attack those facts. Instead we focus on the causality, that it is the complexity of the flavor that masks any difference in taste between low-fat and full-fat chocolate ice cream, and not something else.
There are several ways the answer choice could do this, and it does not benefit you to try to predict in advance what the correct answer choice will say. Instead, focus on two main ideas. First, an answer choice that rejects a possible alternate cause will strengthen the conclusion, while an answer that raises an alternate cause will weaken it.
Next, an answer choice that supports the regularity of the relationship between flavor complexity and masking differences in taste will support the conclusion. Here, the stimulus gives us a hint about what we can look for. The author raised the case of vanilla ice cream, but did not let us know whether vanilla, like chocolate, is a complex flavor. Since people do notice the difference between low-fat and full-fat vanilla ice cream, the correct answer could support the conclusion by telling us that vanilla is not a complex flavor. In other words, when the purported cause is absent, then the effect is absent too.
Answer choice (A): This comparison between full-fat chocolate and full-fat vanilla ice cream is not relevant to the author’s causal conclusion. We are looking for something to do with flavor complexity and masking a difference in taste.
Answer choice (B): Nothing in the stimulus told us that the test subjects’ knowledge of the difference in fat content would impact their taste preferences. So this answer will have no effect on the conclusion.
Answer choice (C): This answer choice is getting closer to what we need, because it references flavor complexity. However, it makes a comparison that is beside the point. Our concern is with the complexity of a flavor masking a difference in taste. The choice tells us that the more complex a taste, the better people like it.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice, because it addresses the regularity of the relationship between the cause and effect described in the conclusion. The stimulus told us that people did notice the difference between full-fat and low-fat vanilla ice cream. In the context of the causal conclusion, this evidence told us the effect was absent (Difference). This answer choice tells us that vanilla is not a complex flavor, meaning the cause is absent too (Complex). So, when the cause is absent, the effect is also absent, supporting the author’s causal conclusion.
Answer choice (E): As with answer choice (B), we have no reason to think that people’s knowledge impacts the causal relationship.