- Fri Jul 24, 2020 2:01 pm
#77410
Hi SwanQueen,
Try to be quite literal (and demanding) of the "match" between the description given in Method answer choices and the explicit discussion in the stimulus argument. Does Millie argue specifically about (or even mention) Oscar's "credibility"? Not that I can see explicitly. That's already a very good reason to reject answer choice E. Your analysis suggests that Millie implies Oscar is not credible (because he's been accused of a technique that Millie calls misleading). But answer choice E isn't talking about what Millie "implies," it's talking about what she "shows." And without any explicit reference to Oscar's credibility, we just can't get to that "showing." Another good reason (literal reason) to reject answer choice E is that Millie nowhere refers to Oscar's "admission" (that he used passages without attribution). Occasionally you might see a Method question answer choice that refers to an implication from something explicitly stated in the argument. But I've never seen a Method answer that referred to a "showing" of two things, both of which have to be read as implications of the argument. Keep it simple: Millie doesn't explicitly discuss Oscar's admission, and she doesn't explicitly mention his credibility. That knocks E out of contention.
Answer choice A is correct because it's a provably accurate description of what Millie does in her argument: she analyzes plagiarism as more than just something that is done without permission. She analyzes plagiarism as a form of lying to a reader. This analysis does undermine Oscar's position, because it suggests what he did would be plagiarism even if he got permission.
I hope this helps!
Jeremy
Jeremy Press
LSAT Instructor and law school admissions consultant
Follow me on Twitter at:
https://twitter.com/JeremyLSAT