PowerScore,
Like many others, I chose E instead of A. I had recognized that "there is a warm sea beneath Europa's icy surface" was indeed a sub-conclusion but also that that it did not DIRECTLY support the arguments main conclusion. What I had quickly diagrammed (in my head) was something like this:
Premise - Photographic evidence about buckling Ice
(leads to)
Sub-Conclusion - Warm sea water underneath
(leads to)
Sub-Conclusion - Warm water is indicative of life
(leads to)
Main Conclusion - There is probably life on Europa
Thus, I thought the "gotcha" that the LSAT was trying to pull was that this phrase wasn't technically supporting the "overall" conclusion since it was both functioning as and serving for another sub-conclusion. I know that my error was in not identifying "warm water is indicative of life" as a standalone premise.
Anyways, my question is that is the reason that this "warm water is indicative of life" is NOT a sub-conclusion just because this fact is in no way derived from the fact that warm water is underneath the sea? I think I was just thrown off my that a sub-conclusion was combined with a standalone premise in the middle of the prompt so close to the overall conclusion.
Thanks!
James Finch wrote:
Sentence 1 serves as a premise.
Sentence 2 is a conclusion based upon the evidence given in sentence 1.
Sentence 3 begins with another premise that is combined with sentence 2's information to give us our main conclusion.