- Wed Sep 30, 2020 11:35 am
#79505
Hi Retteye,
Be careful with answers in Flaw questions that begin with the phrase "takes for granted," or "presumes without providing justification." Those answers are describing a flawed assumption, "takes for granted" being a synonym for "assumes" on the LSAT. Often what's wrong with these answers is that the facts they're describing aren't truly necessary to the author's argument, and therefore aren't actually being assumed by the author. If the fact in the answer isn't being assumed by the author, we have to eliminate the answer (because that answer inaccurately describes the argument).
Many times what happens with such answers is they sketch out a fact that's very strong and broad, much stronger and broader than what the author really needs to assume. That's what's happening with answer choice B here. Our author isn't assuming that any (i.e. every) failure will cause accidental inflation. Our author is assuming that the new systems will have more failures that will probably cause more accidental inflations. See that quantitative difference (affecting both the number of failures and the certainty that they will cause inflations)? That's the reason answer choice B is too strong to be a necessary assumption of the argument. And that's the reason we have to get rid of answer choice B.
Watch out for that on Flaw questions with "takes for granted" (or "presumes") style answer choices. Make sure that assumption fits the quantitative needs of the argument and doesn't go beyond them. If it goes too far, it's wrong.
I hope this helps!
Jeremy Press
LSAT Instructor and law school admissions consultant
Follow me on Twitter at:
https://twitter.com/JeremyLSAT