- Tue Jul 19, 2016 10:35 am
#27271
Complete Question Explanation
Weaken—#%. The correct answer choice is (C)
The author of this stimulus clearly wishes to imply that there has been a 17% increase in crime, but we should read the wording carefully: “Compared to last year, agencies have responded to 17% more calls.” This is a classic LSAT numbers and percentages trick. Without more information about the numbers, there is no way to assess the meaning of a 17% increase in report responses. Perhaps the local agencies have received more funding, and can afford to respond to a greater portion of calls than they could last year. Or maybe people have become more vigilant and started to report more crimes than they used to.
Correct answer choice (C) provides an alternative explanation for the referenced percentage increase, different from that which the author implies in the stimulus. If people are more likely than ever to report crimes to the proper authorities, then the crime rate may not have changed at all. For example, lets say there were 100 crimes committed last year, and 100 this year. If 10 of the crimes committed last year were reported, versus 20 reported this year, that would represent a 100% increase in the number of crimes reported (presuming that authorities responded to all reported crimes).
None of the other answer choices point out how the limited information provided by the author allow for many alternative explanations. Answer choice (A) actually strengthens the author’s conclusion, and answer choice (B) is irrelevant without significantly more information regarding the towns 65+ population this year and last. It is difficult to assess the effects of answer choice (D) on the argumentation in the stimulus, but it certainly does not weaken the author’s conclusion. Answer choice (E) is irrelevant to the stimulus, because the author deals with the likelihood of becoming a victim, regardless of the number of possibly perpetrators.
Weaken—#%. The correct answer choice is (C)
The author of this stimulus clearly wishes to imply that there has been a 17% increase in crime, but we should read the wording carefully: “Compared to last year, agencies have responded to 17% more calls.” This is a classic LSAT numbers and percentages trick. Without more information about the numbers, there is no way to assess the meaning of a 17% increase in report responses. Perhaps the local agencies have received more funding, and can afford to respond to a greater portion of calls than they could last year. Or maybe people have become more vigilant and started to report more crimes than they used to.
Correct answer choice (C) provides an alternative explanation for the referenced percentage increase, different from that which the author implies in the stimulus. If people are more likely than ever to report crimes to the proper authorities, then the crime rate may not have changed at all. For example, lets say there were 100 crimes committed last year, and 100 this year. If 10 of the crimes committed last year were reported, versus 20 reported this year, that would represent a 100% increase in the number of crimes reported (presuming that authorities responded to all reported crimes).
None of the other answer choices point out how the limited information provided by the author allow for many alternative explanations. Answer choice (A) actually strengthens the author’s conclusion, and answer choice (B) is irrelevant without significantly more information regarding the towns 65+ population this year and last. It is difficult to assess the effects of answer choice (D) on the argumentation in the stimulus, but it certainly does not weaken the author’s conclusion. Answer choice (E) is irrelevant to the stimulus, because the author deals with the likelihood of becoming a victim, regardless of the number of possibly perpetrators.