- Posts: 8
- Joined: Jun 07, 2021
- Mon Jun 07, 2021 7:49 pm
#87676
D is suggesting very directly that at best, many short vacations will equal the benefits of a few long vacations, thereby attacking the conclusion by showing how it is not better to have many short vacations. I actually don't understand how the aggregate amount of time could be interpreted as variable because both the long vacations and the short vacations are drawn from the same pool of "vacation time" that is mentioned in the last sentence. Furthermore, I think it would be very premature to assume that dividing up this set amount of vacation time would result in more actual vacation time if you were to use many small vacations than if you were to have one long vacation.
E is based on the wording that 1 long vacation is much more beneficial than 1 short vacation; however, this statement is compatible with the author's conclusion that many short vacations is better than a few long vacations. To illustrate this, consider that 1 long vacation provides 10 relaxation points whereas 1 short vacation provides on 1 relaxation point. In this case, the long vacation is indeed much more relaxing than 1 short vacation, 10x as relaxing in fact. However, if I can take 20 short vacations a year vs only 1 long vacation a year, then very clearly it is more effective to take many small vacations.
My problem with the answer choice isn't so much of E on its own, it's that D is clearly better because it conclusively shows the author's conclusion (that it is better to have many short vacations) to be false.
Can you please explain why E should still be better than D because the explanations that I've found so far do not seem to address how D decisively counters the argument and E is actually not necessarily incompatible with the argument.
Dave Killoran wrote: ↑Sun Nov 17, 2019 7:30 pm Hi LSATBoss,I still don't understand why E is more correct than D.
Thanks for the question. I don't agree with the idea that the author overlooks the total amount of time taken as a factor. As James says above, "The reason (D) doesn't work is that we don't actually know from the stimulus know whether the worker would be taking more or less aggregate vacation time if they followed the stimulus's recommendation, although the way the last sentence is worded implies to me that they would be taking the same amount of vacation time over the course of a year, just dividing it into smaller chunks."
Looking at it again, all the author has talked about is the value of multiple short vacations versus fewer but longer breaks: "several short vacations" vs "one or two long vacations." This is completely consistent with the total amount of time between the two approaches being the same (and in fact would make the advice somewhat more understandable since the difference wouldn't be total time but how it was spent, a la one moving variable instead of two).
Thanks!
D is suggesting very directly that at best, many short vacations will equal the benefits of a few long vacations, thereby attacking the conclusion by showing how it is not better to have many short vacations. I actually don't understand how the aggregate amount of time could be interpreted as variable because both the long vacations and the short vacations are drawn from the same pool of "vacation time" that is mentioned in the last sentence. Furthermore, I think it would be very premature to assume that dividing up this set amount of vacation time would result in more actual vacation time if you were to use many small vacations than if you were to have one long vacation.
E is based on the wording that 1 long vacation is much more beneficial than 1 short vacation; however, this statement is compatible with the author's conclusion that many short vacations is better than a few long vacations. To illustrate this, consider that 1 long vacation provides 10 relaxation points whereas 1 short vacation provides on 1 relaxation point. In this case, the long vacation is indeed much more relaxing than 1 short vacation, 10x as relaxing in fact. However, if I can take 20 short vacations a year vs only 1 long vacation a year, then very clearly it is more effective to take many small vacations.
My problem with the answer choice isn't so much of E on its own, it's that D is clearly better because it conclusively shows the author's conclusion (that it is better to have many short vacations) to be false.
Can you please explain why E should still be better than D because the explanations that I've found so far do not seem to address how D decisively counters the argument and E is actually not necessarily incompatible with the argument.