- Thu Jul 29, 2021 6:26 pm
#89194
Hi Desiboy,
Oh, these main point questions, eh? It's definitely important to get the main idea down via prephrase, but these questions themselves are more art than probably anything else on the exam, so reliance on said prephrase will probably not be the most effective means of answering these questions for accuracy. Given this, the best approach is one of eliminating wrong answers.
For this particular question, you've identified, precisely, why C is wrong. It's simply too narrow, right? There's much more to the story than simply self-similarity, even though we were treated to an entire paragraph and it is a common feature of fractals themselves (which the actual subject of the passage, Fractal Geometry, takes to studying). So, because C is too narrow, like you said, we can eliminate it as an answer choice.
Having eliminated C, the next question is, well, which answer is correct? And for this, B is indeed the best answer, as it really cohesively ties together all the ideas mentioned in the passage. We get the idea about the generation of complex forms (the fractals themselves, like the Koch Curve); we get the idea about public intrigue (line 37), and finally, we get the idea of the reservations by the "hardcore" mathematicians about fractal geometry's "lack of rigor," (the final 10 lines or so).
For this passage, I will say, there were multiple sometimes seemingly disparate ideas being thrown at the reader. You may not have even heard of fractal geometry, as I'm sure is the case for quite a few Prelaw majors taking the LSAT. Given this, it's important to construe the main point as broad as possible, so that you are able tie together all the points.
Let me know if you have further questions.