- Wed Mar 04, 2015 12:00 am
#34969
Complete Question Explanation
(See the complete passage discussion here: lsat/viewtopic.php?t=14154)
The correct answer choice is (C)
The answer to this question is prephrased in the VIEWSTAMP analysis above.
Answer choice (A): While some secondary substances do operate as natural defenses against
damage and destruction by insects, not all of them do. This answer choice cannot be proven with the
information contained in the passage, and does not provide a summary of its main point.
Answer choice (B): While this answer choice would pass the Fact Test given the information in the
third paragraph, it is not the main point of the passage. Be mindful of Main Point answer choices
drawn exclusively from one particular paragraph, especially if that paragraph is the last one in the
passage. Students often assume, incorrectly, that the final paragraph is most likely to contain the
author’s main point—an assumption frequently exploited by the test-makers.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice: after describing what secondary substances
are, the author argues that they result from an evolutionary process of interaction between plants
and insects. Although this claim does not directly address the information contained in the third
paragraph, it still provides a better summary of the passage than any of the other four answer
choices.
Answer choice (D): This is an attractive answer choice, as it can be proven by reference to the first
paragraph of the passage. The author does not, however, elaborate on the diversity of secondary
substances or their distribution among plants. While they tend to be similar among closely related
species (lines 11-13), this is not a major point of the passage and is of little importance to the
argument developed in the second and third paragraphs.
Answer choice (E): Although secondary substances did appear as a result of genetic mutations, this
is not why plants have come to participate in a continuing process of competition with plant-eating
insects. Rather, the secondary substances provide the means by which that process occurs.
(See the complete passage discussion here: lsat/viewtopic.php?t=14154)
The correct answer choice is (C)
The answer to this question is prephrased in the VIEWSTAMP analysis above.
Answer choice (A): While some secondary substances do operate as natural defenses against
damage and destruction by insects, not all of them do. This answer choice cannot be proven with the
information contained in the passage, and does not provide a summary of its main point.
Answer choice (B): While this answer choice would pass the Fact Test given the information in the
third paragraph, it is not the main point of the passage. Be mindful of Main Point answer choices
drawn exclusively from one particular paragraph, especially if that paragraph is the last one in the
passage. Students often assume, incorrectly, that the final paragraph is most likely to contain the
author’s main point—an assumption frequently exploited by the test-makers.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice: after describing what secondary substances
are, the author argues that they result from an evolutionary process of interaction between plants
and insects. Although this claim does not directly address the information contained in the third
paragraph, it still provides a better summary of the passage than any of the other four answer
choices.
Answer choice (D): This is an attractive answer choice, as it can be proven by reference to the first
paragraph of the passage. The author does not, however, elaborate on the diversity of secondary
substances or their distribution among plants. While they tend to be similar among closely related
species (lines 11-13), this is not a major point of the passage and is of little importance to the
argument developed in the second and third paragraphs.
Answer choice (E): Although secondary substances did appear as a result of genetic mutations, this
is not why plants have come to participate in a continuing process of competition with plant-eating
insects. Rather, the secondary substances provide the means by which that process occurs.