- Wed May 17, 2017 3:27 pm
#34978
Complete Question Explanation
(See the complete passage discussion here: lsat/viewtopic.php?t=14161)
The correct answer choice is (E)
This Main Point question can be challenging, in part because the passage amounts to a description
of someone else’s position (Warsh’s). To make matters worse, Warsh’s argument has two distinctly
different objectives: to clarify why two economic models are incompatible with each other, and
explain why one of them failed to gain prominence among economists for a long time. None of the
five answer choices adequately summarizes both of these points, nor do they have to: the question
is not asking us to restate Warsh’s arguments, but rather to express the main point of the passage.
Warsh’s arguments are, above all, explanatory: they establish the causes of a particular phenomenon
in economic theory. By contrast, the main point of the passage is to describe the occurrence of that
phenomenon and situate it in historical perspective. The distinction between the two perspectives is
subtle, but crucial.
Answer choice (A): This answer choice is factually incorrect: for almost two centuries, the
assumption of diminishing, not increasing, returns has dominated economic theory (lines 36-37).
Answer choice (B): This answer choice can be attractive, because it summarizes the causal argument
attributed to Warsh in the fourth paragraph. However, as discussed earlier, the question is asking us
to express the main point of the passage, which is slightly different in scope as well as purpose.
Answer choice (C): There is no evidence that the Pin Factory has recently been modeled even more
rigorously than the Invisible Hand. This answer choice contains an exaggeration and can easily be
eliminated.
Answer choice (D): Even though this answer choice can be proven by reference to the second
paragraph of the passage, it is not the main point. The author only mentions Adam Smith in order
to define certain key terms of Warsh’s argument, not to illustrate Smith’s contributions to modern
economic thought.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. As discussed in the VIEWSTAMP analysis
above, the main point of the passage is to describe the inherent contradiction between two economic
models, and point to the failure of mainstream economists to account for one of these two models.
Answer choice (E) is the closest to this prephrase, and is therefore correct.
(See the complete passage discussion here: lsat/viewtopic.php?t=14161)
The correct answer choice is (E)
This Main Point question can be challenging, in part because the passage amounts to a description
of someone else’s position (Warsh’s). To make matters worse, Warsh’s argument has two distinctly
different objectives: to clarify why two economic models are incompatible with each other, and
explain why one of them failed to gain prominence among economists for a long time. None of the
five answer choices adequately summarizes both of these points, nor do they have to: the question
is not asking us to restate Warsh’s arguments, but rather to express the main point of the passage.
Warsh’s arguments are, above all, explanatory: they establish the causes of a particular phenomenon
in economic theory. By contrast, the main point of the passage is to describe the occurrence of that
phenomenon and situate it in historical perspective. The distinction between the two perspectives is
subtle, but crucial.
Answer choice (A): This answer choice is factually incorrect: for almost two centuries, the
assumption of diminishing, not increasing, returns has dominated economic theory (lines 36-37).
Answer choice (B): This answer choice can be attractive, because it summarizes the causal argument
attributed to Warsh in the fourth paragraph. However, as discussed earlier, the question is asking us
to express the main point of the passage, which is slightly different in scope as well as purpose.
Answer choice (C): There is no evidence that the Pin Factory has recently been modeled even more
rigorously than the Invisible Hand. This answer choice contains an exaggeration and can easily be
eliminated.
Answer choice (D): Even though this answer choice can be proven by reference to the second
paragraph of the passage, it is not the main point. The author only mentions Adam Smith in order
to define certain key terms of Warsh’s argument, not to illustrate Smith’s contributions to modern
economic thought.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. As discussed in the VIEWSTAMP analysis
above, the main point of the passage is to describe the inherent contradiction between two economic
models, and point to the failure of mainstream economists to account for one of these two models.
Answer choice (E) is the closest to this prephrase, and is therefore correct.