Lsat180Please wrote:Can you please discuss why C is incorrect? Also how would you recommend attacking this question on an actual test? I loved your explanations but I know I would not have time to do all that math on the actual exam. Thank you!
Hey there,
Answer choice C) doesn't quite strengthen the argument for two reasons that I can see: First, the fact that "children" are taking more trips in cars doesn't tell us how old those children are--maybe the increase was only among children aged 5 and up. Second, it's not clear how taking more trips would put them at a greater risk of a serious accident, since the average total time they spent in cars remained constant.
As for the "real time" reasoning process, I wouldn't say you need to do any math at all! The important thing to notice about the argument is just that it depends on a certain "number and percentage" relationship to apply equally to the the premises and to the conclusion.
The argument can be distilled like this:
P1. MORE children under 4 are using safety seats now than they were 8 years ago.
P2. The total number of children under 4 who were killed in accidents over the last 8 years INCREASED LESS than the number of serious accidents overall.
Conclusion: The increased use of safety seats prevented child fatalities that otherwise would have occurred.
The logic goes, since the number of child fatalities was lower than would be expected based on the increase in serious accidents overall, then the safety seats must have saved some lives. In order to reach that conclusion, we need to know that the PROPORTION of children involved in serious accidents didn't significantly decrease for some reason. Answer choice B) assures us that the proportion remained the same, so the conclusion follows.
I hope that helps!
- Ben