- Wed Jun 19, 2019 6:25 pm
#65726
jayzbrisk,
Two things:
(1) The LSAT instructs you not to make assumptions that are by commonsense standards implausible. I believe this means that you have to resolve the meaning of answer choices along commonsense lines.
(2) Keeping (1) in mind, if a plausible interpretation exists that strengthens, and a plausible interpretation exists that weakens, that is a problem for the answer choice unless you're doing a very specific question like "the answer to which of the following questions would be most helpful in evaluating the reasoning above."
The stimulus is simple. It's causal. It proposes that carelessness causes the accidents. Another cause would weaken the stimulus. Answer choice (A) indicates that the accidents are happening in a high traffic area, an alternative cause by any commonsense standard.
Two things:
(1) The LSAT instructs you not to make assumptions that are by commonsense standards implausible. I believe this means that you have to resolve the meaning of answer choices along commonsense lines.
(2) Keeping (1) in mind, if a plausible interpretation exists that strengthens, and a plausible interpretation exists that weakens, that is a problem for the answer choice unless you're doing a very specific question like "the answer to which of the following questions would be most helpful in evaluating the reasoning above."
The stimulus is simple. It's causal. It proposes that carelessness causes the accidents. Another cause would weaken the stimulus. Answer choice (A) indicates that the accidents are happening in a high traffic area, an alternative cause by any commonsense standard.