- Fri Jun 23, 2017 6:52 pm
#36299
You're right that your confusion is probably stemming from bringing in too much outside info, ksandberg. Who says that gaining muscle is healthy? I don't see that in the stimulus, so let's leave it out. I also don't see anything about where the study was done or whether it was conducted properly, so let's leave that out, too. We will only consider those factors if an answer brings them up.
I'm not a fan of correct answer C here, but it is the best of the bunch. If the paradox here is that some studies showed weight gain to be unhealthy and correlated to shorter life spans while another showed it to correlate to longer life spans, we need to find some reason for why those studies could both be accurate. Ideally, I want an answer that tells me about a crucial difference between the studies. For example, the one study could have been looking at people who were, at the time the study began, extremely underweight, while the other ones looked at people of average weight. I don't like answer C because it doesn't do that, and I don't want to have to assume that the first study looked at people who quit smoking. Still, answer C at least allows for the possibility that, in some cases, weight gain can be a sign of health and long life, even while in other cases it is not. It's not a great answer, but it is the best answer, and that, after all, is what the authors of the test have instructed us to select.
I'll point out that this test is from 1994, making it among the oldest ones in the modern era of the LSAT. In those first few years they were still working out some kinks, and we've seen some question stems and answer choices in those early years that were poorly written compared to more recent ones. I don't know that this answer, as written, would pass muster today. For that reason, while studying older tests is useful, you will want to focus on the more recent tests as you get closer to your test date. The test has gone through some evolution over time, and weeding out bad answers like this one is part of that evolution, as is a slowly changing pattern of how questions are asked and which types tend to dominate. We've seen some patterns, like "double trouble" (two stems after one stimulus) go away completely (although there's nothing to say they won't return!)
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Adam M. Tyson
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