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- Sat Jul 22, 2017 9:38 am
#37538
adlindsey wrote:Anyway, well thought out plans can be inferred from the first sentence, since they are not accidental. And it continues explaining the plan. These plans fail because they alienate and cause shoppers to dislike! The wording "can" matches both the answer choice and what's in the stimulus!I'll address the question response part here. Ok, here are two parts to answer choice (C):
- 1. "Even well-thought-out plans..."
Ok, you have correctly identified that supermarket layouts are planned ("Anyway, well thought out plans can be inferred from the first sentence"). It doesn't precisely say they are well-thought out (because "not accidental" and "part of a plan" isn't identical to "well-thought out"), but I'll let that pass and say they are close enough to be the same. So, the problem isn't here.
2. "...can fail."
Where's the "failure?" Just because some consumers don't like it? No, that doesn't equate to failure, and to draw that conclusion is to engage in a part-to-whole fallacy (namely that because part of the plan didn't go perfectly that the whole plan is bad). It's just as likely that despite the inconvenience, the overall sales of the supermarkets are higher because of the plan, and that could be seen as an overall success by the supermarket (which is in fact the case in real life).
Dave Killoran
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Follow me on X/Twitter at http://twitter.com/DaveKilloran
My LSAT Articles: http://blog.powerscore.com/lsat/author/dave-killoran
PowerScore Podcast: http://www.powerscore.com/lsat/podcast/