- Fri Jul 21, 2017 6:33 pm
#37526
I think your prephrase is on the right track, bk1111. Since the conclusion is that a glacier deposited the boulder, you want to pick an answer that calls that into question. Maybe the boulder got here some other way? If we had an answer that tracked with that, we'd be happy - something like "volcanoes often eject boulders with such force that they land far away from their source" or "this boulder shows markings on it consistent with its having been moved here by machines made by humans", or even "this boulder's mineral composition shows that it originated on another planet and could have landed on this spot from outer space".
Unfortunately, none of our answer choices suggests any alternate scenarios like those (Alternate causes, perhaps? Might this stimulus have causal reasoning?) so we have to look elsewhere.
Consider that most arguments on the LSAT are flawed, and that all flaws can be described one way or another as being based on a possibly flawed assumption. When we weaken a question, we are challenging the author's assumptions. When we strengthen, we are supporting those assumptions. So what assumption did our author make here? in order to claim that the volcanic boulder arrived at this spot by southward glacial movement, he must have assumed that somewhere to the north of this spot is a source of volcanic rock! To weaken the claim, attack that assumption - look for something that says "oh no there isn't!" If there is no source north of here, then his claim that a southward-moving glacier brought it here isn't just weakened, it's pretty well destroyed. There's answer D giving us exactly that.
Answer A sure does look like it would weaken the argument to me, but not by much, as our explanation says. Just because most boulders don't get moved hundreds of miles from their point of origin, that doesn't mean that all don't, or that this one didn't. I kept this as a contender, but only until something that did more to weaken the argument came along, and D fit the bill by making the claim not just a little weaker, but nearly impossible.
In prephrasing, consider those two approaches, which are very similar to the way we look at Assumption questions (Supporters and Defenders). On the one hand, consider alternatives to the claimed relationship, and on the other, consider attacking the stated claim directly by making it less likely to be viable.
Keep at it, you'll get there!
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
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