LSAT and Law School Admissions Forum

Get expert LSAT preparation and law school admissions advice from PowerScore Test Preparation.

 SammyWu11201
  • Posts: 29
  • Joined: Jun 29, 2020
|
#82678
I'm still having a really hard time wrapping my head around AC E. Can you please translate what AC E is saying, and what an argument that uses AC E would look like, and if AC E is actually describing a flaw? I'm just really lost the more that I think about it. Thanks!
 Adam Tyson
PowerScore Staff
  • PowerScore Staff
  • Posts: 5374
  • Joined: Apr 14, 2011
|
#83691
Happy to help, SammyWu11201! Answer E is describing a causal flaw ("contributed to" is your clue there), and it describes an argument where someone has argued that because one thing at least partially caused another thing, it must have been the sole cause. For example:

It appears that improperly maintained brakes played a role in the collision. Thus, had the brakes been properly maintained, the collision would not have occurred.

or

The minister's aide passed harmful information about the minister to the press, which was used to bring down the minister. Therefore, the minister's aide is solely responsible for the newspaper story that brought the minister down.

Both cases involve one cause contributing to an effect, and the author concludes that stated cause was enough, by itself, to be fully responsible for the effect. But in the first case, perhaps speed played a factor in the collision too, and distractions, and bald tires? In the second case, perhaps the leader of the opposition also passed on harmful information that was essential to bringing down the minister?

Parse those challenging answers into bite-sized bits to make them easier to manage. A phrase here, a phrase there, and it should all come together!
 nguyenpcindy
  • Posts: 5
  • Joined: Aug 10, 2021
|
#91557
hi! I understand why A is the correct answer when you break this stimulus down, but I am struggling with why E is still an incorrect answer. I am assuming my interpretation is wrong but want to check.

I chose E because I interpreted it as:

"treating evidence that a given action contributed to bringing about a certain effect as though that evidence established that the given action by itself was sufficient to bring about that effect" --> meaning: the aide leaking information partially lead to the minister's resignation is the same as the aide leaking information being ENOUGH to lead to the minister's resignation.

I struggled between A and E because they appear to both be pointing to an alternate cause that led to the minister's resignation. To me, what E is describing is that the argument takes for granted that the aide leaking information is the main reason why the minister resigned although there could be a myriad of other things (e.g. unpopular opinion, financial or personal scandal, etc). Any correction would help, thanks!
 Rachael Wilkenfeld
PowerScore Staff
  • PowerScore Staff
  • Posts: 1419
  • Joined: Dec 15, 2011
|
#91581
We don't want to bring in other reasons the minister could have resigned, nguyenpcindy, because the stimulus tells us it was the newspaper article that forced the resignation. So the information given by the person from the meeting was sufficient to bring down the minister. The error in reasoning is that the information didn't have to come from the minister's aide. It could have come from the opposition leader who also was at the secret meeting.

Hope that helps!
User avatar
 emilyjmyer
  • Posts: 48
  • Joined: May 11, 2022
|
#95488
Hi!

So in this stimulus there is conditional reasoning present in the premises. And the answer choice (E) that used conditional reasoning dealt with the conditional reasoning in the premises and not the conclusion. Therefore, it is wrong because we cannot question the premises. Is that correct?

Does this question show us that sometimes there may be conditional reasoning present but the flaw may be in a different type of reasoning in the argument?

Thanks!
User avatar
 katehos
PowerScore Staff
  • PowerScore Staff
  • Posts: 184
  • Joined: Mar 31, 2022
|
#96029
Hi emilyjymer!

Yes and yes! Since it is a premise of the argument that the story forced the finance minister to resign, we can't question that. The author of the stimulus clearly attributes the resignation to the story, so there's no issue of a partial contributor to a problem being confused as being able to entirely cause the problem on its own.

This question is a great example of conditional reasoning being used as a red herring of sorts. The flaw itself here has nothing to do with conditional reasoning, but rather it is based on the fact that the same line of reasoning could easily lead one to conclude that the leader of the opposition party leaked the information! Good job!

Hope this helps :)
Kate
 dshen123
  • Posts: 32
  • Joined: Nov 18, 2023
|
#109644
Helloo!
Is the sufficient evidence contained in the first sentence? The conclusion regarding that he was brought down by his aide the last sentence? I was confused because the first sentence contains the "action contributed to a certain effect" and the last sentence has "another action by itself sufficient to bring about the same effect".
Thank you!
User avatar
 Jeff Wren
PowerScore Staff
  • PowerScore Staff
  • Posts: 651
  • Joined: Oct 19, 2022
|
#109993
Hi dshen,

First, if you haven't done so already, I'd recommend that you read through the entire forum post on this question. As you will see, many students had questions about this one, especially Answer E.

The "evidence" mentioned in Answer E that "brings about a certain effect" refers to the newspaper story that forced the minister to resign (which is stated in the first sentence of the stimulus). The minister resigning is the effect that resulted from the newspaper story. Because this premise tells us flat out that the newspaper story forced the minister to resign (rather than saying that the newspaper contributed to the minister's resignation, but there may have been additional reasons), the flaw in Answer E is not describing the flaw in this argument. In other words, the argument doesn't confuse a partial contributing cause for a single sufficient cause. The newspaper story was in fact the single sufficient cause that forced the minister's resignation.

Instead, the flaw appears in the conclusion of the argument (which is usually where it can be found), when the argument concludes that the minister's aide leaked the information, when it is possible (and would make much more sense) that is was the leader of the opposition party who leaked the information given that the leader of the opposition party would have a motive to undermine the minister (as they are political rivals) that the minister's trusted aide would not.

Get the most out of your LSAT Prep Plus subscription.

Analyze and track your performance with our Testing and Analytics Package.