- Tue Jul 12, 2022 1:39 pm
#96145
Hi Adam,
I heard your response. Respectfully, respectfully, I feel that we cannot ignore how far the cars can go because Umit makes an issue of their range in the stimulus. So for Henry to blow passed that, Henry would be committing the flaw of ignoring the evidence that Umit introduced!
In addition, and please read my response in the way I intend it, with absolute humility, appreciation, respect, and deference to your expertise, the question stem says "if true." So, assuming each answer-choice "true" in the context of the stimulus to which Umit's argument is integral.
Having raised the issues that are still obstructing my ability to clearly see your response. I think the mistake that I made was in defining the term "power plants" in A.
Let's forget whether it is an "electrical" plant for the moment: Generally speaking, a power plant is like an agricultural farm or a drilling oil refinery; we do not go to the oil refinery to get fuel for our cars, and we do not go to a farm to buy our fruits and vegetables (although there was another earlier LSAT diagnostic in which the author of a reading comprehension passage advocated for buying directly from the farm provided the farmers take precautionary measures like purchasing accidental insurance, paving the roads leading to the farm... But I've digressed).
A gas station, on the other hand, is like the intermediary (middleman/middlewoman) between the refinery and the consumer; and in the case of the farm, the intermediary agent would be the grocery store. To buy our fruits and vegetables, we go to the grocery store, we do not go the farm; and people, generally speaking, go to the gas stations to buy gas for their cars, they do not go to the petroleum refineries.
So now back to the context of "electricity," I conflated its plant/farm/refinery for its intermediary/gas station/grocery store.
In retrospect, my false interpretation was problematic. When I was taking the diagnostic, under the gun of the clock, I misconstrued the operational definition of the term "power plant." And worse, when I went back to review it without time constraints, I picked up passed my false definition and so I did not suspect that the heart of my issue was definitional!
I got entangled in my own reasoning (identify the evidence, identify the support, find the gap/flaw the usual LSAT skills), and ultimately I posted my thoughts.
I genuinely thank you for not ignoring my posts, for helping me zoom in on what is important, and hone in my skills.
Finally, this dialogue was extraordinarily helpful, far beyond this question helpful, because it highlights a strategy of broader applicability, and although it's basic, it is quintessential to reset, disentangle, and extricate myself from these circular mazes.
And the strategy is this: Zoom in on key words/phrases/terms, make sure I define them correctly, and make sure not to conflate them with another related term, e.g. oil refinery versus gas station, or a farm versus a grocery store!
Respectfully,
Thank You
Mazen