- Mon Nov 01, 2021 12:28 pm
#91738
Hi - completely concur with almost everything that Rocketman wrote, I just thought I'd add in a few additional reasons why I thought that some other answer choices were wrong. I also narrowed it down on the first pass to B, D, E. And the stimulus engages in a really common flaw on the LSAT that occurs anytime an argument asserts that A caused B.
Any time the LSAT claims that A caused B, try to have alarm bells going off. Here, the author is not making an explicit causal claim, but there is something of a soft-causal argument happening - the author is saying that Oromo culture influenced Swahili culture. Any time I see an A caused/influenced/impacted B argument, I try to consider one of the three possibilities.
First, the chicken and the egg possibility. What if A didn't impact B, but B impacted A? Second, what if a third thing - C - impacted both A and B, and that is why they appear to have a relationship? Third, what if there is no actual relationship and the apparent relationship is a pure coincidence? Those three possibilities - B impacted A, C impacted both A and B, or no impact between them - are what I try to search consider on questions like this.
To the answer choices! B is tempting, because it plays off that first possibility I mentioned, and the LSAT writers know that. But - as I always try to do whenever I'm down to a final two or three options - return to the stimulus. Does the author ever say that either 1) one event came before the other or 2) that one event caused the other? No! The two key pillars of this answer do not match the stimulus. Take it out with the trash.
Then, answer choice D. At first, I was pretty tempted by this answer, because it fits with the second possibility that I mentioned. Again, the LSAT writers know this. My problem with this answer was that it also falls apart upon comparison to the stimulus. First, we know that among the people the Swahili culture had contact with, only the Oromo had this particular design. Which means that the only remaining possibility is that a third civilization influenced the Oromo, who influenced the Swahili. But that - I would argue - is valid, to say that a third civ way back influenced one then the other. That's not a flaw. The flaw is assuming the order, which is what answer choice E gives us. Hope that helps offer some additional thoughts.
Lastly, always go back to the stimulus. A really common time-suck for me (and many others I know) is that I spend time comparing answers against EACH OTHER. I noticed a big improvement in my LSAT score once I stopped comparing answer choices against each other (except for the narrow purpose of teasing out differences) and started comparing them against the all-holy stimulus.