- Fri Aug 28, 2020 4:16 pm
#78527
Hi Claudia and Tolu!
Claudia, the premises here are not conditional statements (instead they state correlations--"more this, more that"), so we don't have any contrapositives to look out for. The problem with answer choice A is that it's making a definitive statement about the future that the premises provide no basis for. The premises do not say how well we currently understand any particular endangered species, so we don't know how far we have to go (or if we have to get any more understanding than we have currently!) to save them from extinction. Without that information at least, there's no way to predict whether those species will become extinct.
Tolu, the numbers and percents here come from terms like "better chance" (a percentage-based notion that with better understanding comes a higher likelihood of saving an endangered species) and "more individuals" (meaning, a greater number of individuals). Answer choice C is tricky, but derived from the relatively simple notion that correlations run in both directions. Since more individuals studied means better understanding, fewer individuals available to study is likely to mean less (or at least a harder time!) understanding the species. That's all you really need to arrive at answer choice C.
I hope this helps!
Jeremy Press
LSAT Instructor and law school admissions consultant
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