- Wed Oct 13, 2021 5:32 pm
#91425
Hi Katnyc,
One thing that you appreciate in LSAT questions after a while, and this is really true regardless of question type, is that the answer choices, the correct ones that is, are generally going to be those that maximally resolutive of any and all ambiguities. In other words, the issue is really clarity (and yes, resolutive is a word I believe). At all times, whether in the "prove" family, the "help" family, or otherwise, you're looking for the answer that leaves the least room for further questioning. The answer choice that might be plausibly correct, but that also opens the doors for further questions is generally going to be wrong, especially when there is another choice that is definitively correct, and would do so without any ambiguity.
This particular question, I believe, is a very good example of this. D is necessarily true given the argument. If the information given by the chorus is sometimes not consistent, and it is this fact that leads one to conclude that it therefore is not equivalent to the narrator, then it must be necessarily be true that the narrator is never not consistent.
Now, like you, I believe that being deceptive is being inconsistent, and I also believe that this might the dictionary definition of being deceptive. But being deceptive has a connotation that goes much further than just "delivering inconsistent information." In other words, it has a value judgment tied to it, inextricably. You want to stay away from value judgments, to the extent possible on the LSAT. You want to stay away from answer choices that use terms that are not clearly used in the stimulus, especially to the extent that another choice that does use terms from the stimulus is available, and you want to stay away from answer choices that create additional questions, such as, what exactly would be required for a narrator never to be deceptive? In a murder mystery, like the famous The Murder of Roger Ackroyd, is the narrator deceptive there? I don't know. And on the LSAT, I don't have to.
Let me know if you have further questions.