- Mon May 08, 2017 7:05 pm
#34657
Hi jrafert,
What you're saying is true for some LSAT questions, like must be true's, but not for weaken. In weaken questions, we trust the Answer Choices and are suspicious of the stimulus. So I'm completely allowed to use new information in a weaken question, I just need to see if said information weakens the conclusion.
In this case, even though it's new information in choice (B), we don't care because the question stem asks us, "which of the following, if true, weakens the columnist's argument?"
Hope this helps!
Steven
What you're saying is true for some LSAT questions, like must be true's, but not for weaken. In weaken questions, we trust the Answer Choices and are suspicious of the stimulus. So I'm completely allowed to use new information in a weaken question, I just need to see if said information weakens the conclusion.
In this case, even though it's new information in choice (B), we don't care because the question stem asks us, "which of the following, if true, weakens the columnist's argument?"
Hope this helps!
Steven