- Mon Oct 28, 2019 11:45 am
#71526
Hi ayachouaib,
In these "fill-in-the-blank" questions where the blank you're being asked to fill is a conclusion (notice the blank has a "thus" indicator before it, meaning you're supposed to treat the blank as supplying a logical conclusion to the argument), the answer you select should be the one that is most strongly supported by the previous statements. In other words, you're treating the question the same as you would a "Must Be True/Most Strongly Supported" question. Answer choice B is incorrect because it states that there is a causal relationship between two things (low self-esteem and being treated disrespectfully) that, from the prior statements, we only know there is a correlation between: it tends to be true that low self-esteem people are treated disrespectfully more often. That correlation could easily provide support for other explanations: maybe a person's having low self-esteem is something others notice and and that causes them to treat the person disrespectfully. Or maybe the relationship is coincidental. Since we can't know the true explanation based on the stimulus, we cannot be at all certain that the causal relationship in answer choice B is true.
I hope this helps!
Jeremy
Jeremy Press
LSAT Instructor and law school admissions consultant
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