- Sun May 23, 2021 12:59 pm
#87292
This argument has one standalone premise, one intermediate conclusion, and one main conclusion, crispycrispr. It is built like this:
Premise: Teen drivers cause a disproportionate share of traffic fatalities (they are 7% of drivers but responsible for 14% of fatalities, the last sentence of the stimulus.)
Intermediate Conclusion: Teen drivers lack basic driving skills. (based on the above premise; the author is arguing that the disproportionate share of fatalities is due to a lack of skill)
Main conclusion: Restrictions should be placed on teen drivers. (based on the claim that they lack basic driving skills)
The stem wants us to focus on that intermediate conclusion rather than the main conclusion. That is an argument within the stimulus and it is fair of the test makers to ask us to focus on that, even though there is another argument that they could have asked us to weaken (that restrictions should be placed on those drivers).
You asked how we are supposed to know which conclusion to focus on, but the answer is right there in the stem: they told us which one to weaken, so that's the one we pay attention to and we don't worry about the other one!
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
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