- Posts: 18
- Joined: Mar 03, 2021
- Wed Mar 03, 2021 2:06 am
#84739
Hello,
I just finished Ch.2 of the 2019 LR book and I had a couple questions I was hoping to get clarified.
1) In page 56, the book says "acceptability of the premises does not automatically make the conclusion acceptable. The reverse is also true--the acceptability of the conclusion does not automatically make the premises acceptable". So, I completely understand the first half of that phrase as it is best exemplified by the stimulus about Jacksonville. However, I don't understand how the reverse can also be true because under the truth vs validity section we are told "LSAT makers will let you work under a framework where premises are simply accepted as factually accurate, and then you must focus solely on the method used to reach the conclusion."
2a) For problem 5 in the Premise and Conclusion Drill (i.e. the cookiecutter shark problem), I don't see how the prompt doesn't establish that cookiecutter sharks aren't endangered. When you apply the given fact about these sharks being a minor threat to humans with the following sentence about "fishes that are a minor threat are not endangered", you should get the conclusion that cookiecutter sharks are not endangered.
b) Also, I was wondering if another reason this argument could be considered weak is because there could be other objections to the drilling project like morality or monetary reasons, similar to how the answer key does for the following problem about hog farming.
Thanks,
Barath
I just finished Ch.2 of the 2019 LR book and I had a couple questions I was hoping to get clarified.
1) In page 56, the book says "acceptability of the premises does not automatically make the conclusion acceptable. The reverse is also true--the acceptability of the conclusion does not automatically make the premises acceptable". So, I completely understand the first half of that phrase as it is best exemplified by the stimulus about Jacksonville. However, I don't understand how the reverse can also be true because under the truth vs validity section we are told "LSAT makers will let you work under a framework where premises are simply accepted as factually accurate, and then you must focus solely on the method used to reach the conclusion."
2a) For problem 5 in the Premise and Conclusion Drill (i.e. the cookiecutter shark problem), I don't see how the prompt doesn't establish that cookiecutter sharks aren't endangered. When you apply the given fact about these sharks being a minor threat to humans with the following sentence about "fishes that are a minor threat are not endangered", you should get the conclusion that cookiecutter sharks are not endangered.
b) Also, I was wondering if another reason this argument could be considered weak is because there could be other objections to the drilling project like morality or monetary reasons, similar to how the answer key does for the following problem about hog farming.
Thanks,
Barath