In this question I don't see the difference between analogy and example.


I erroneously chose the answer choice that referred to analogy. How is this not an analogy?
A correct weaken/strengthen answer choice will weaken/strengthen the conclusion - it could be "just enough", as you put it, by which I assume you mean it just makes it a little less/more likely to be valid; it could completely in/validate the conclusion; or anywhere in between.dreamofNYC wrote:Logical force in weaken / strengthen questions. In weaken / Strengthen questions does the correct answer choice "just enough" weaken or strengthen the conclusion, or also more than enough. i.e., use of can vs definitely, use of some vs. most, etc. Do you have some general pointers on that?
This would fall under the identifying an alternate cause part of weakening a causal argument. I also don't have a strong causal relationship here - I just know that camellia tea-drinkers are more likely to get kidney damage than people in general - this could mean regular people have a .5% chance, while camellia tea drinkers have a 1% chance. But simply pointing out another possible cause of the damage is enough to weaken a causal relationship.PT 53, Section 3, Q 9
I'm more wary of *some* logical force in weaken/strengthen questions - *most* statements are almost always strong enough to have an effect on the argument. If something is true of most of a group, chances are that it's true of a random element you pick from that group.Also PT 53, Section 1, Q 3
Same note on this one - *most* statements are almost always strong enough to have an effect on the argument.PT 55, Section 3, Q 14
If two things aren't correlated, it'd be hard for there to be a causal relationship - if they don't go together, then one thing isn't really causing the other to happen. The exception to this would be an intervening event that prevents the effect from happening.dreamofNYC wrote:Does causation require the existence of a correlation? Meaning if I can only derive a causation from a correlation. In PT 52, Section 1, Q 8 the correct answer choice weakens the possibility that there is a correlation between nightlights during infancy and near-nearsightedness. So the conclusion says "if there is a causal connection, that connection disappears with age", and the correct answer choice disputes the likelihood of a correlation.
Is this the correct way to think about this question? Thanks so much.
Yep, though I'd force myself to diagram all but the simplest of questions. It'll actually take less time than trying to juggle all the terms in your head, and it'll prevent stupid mistakes.dreamofNYC wrote:BP Shinners, I also have a general question regarding learning curve for LR questions. I have done so many LR questions that I feel that I am developing a sort of x-ray that enables me to see the logical "skeleton" of the questions. And beyond the fancy words, I see similarities between questions I've done in other PTs. I also feel like I am getting at the point where I can get away without diagramming most questions. Is this where I want to be prior to taking the exam?
Thank you.
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This would fall under the identifying an alternate cause part of weakening a causal argument. I also don't have a strong causal relationship here - I just know that camellia tea-drinkers are more likely to get kidney damage than people in general - this could mean regular people have a .5% chance, while camellia tea drinkers have a 1% chance. But simply pointing out another possible cause of the damage is enough to weaken a causal relationship.PT 53, Section 3, Q 9
Thanks. Two questions on this one. So in the conclusion "can result" means there can be a causal relationship? Is *can result* equivalent to *it is likely* or it is *probable*? Also, when the stimulus tells me "regular drinkers are more likely to develop kidney damage" - does this suggest a correlation or already this suggests a causation? Also I notice that the right answer choice uses *many* instead of *most* people, although I understand that it also provides an alternate cause. Sorry I feel that it's all a mix in my head now. Thanks again!
"can result" means there is a causal relationship, but it's not necessarily 1:1 - you might have the cause without the effect.dreamofNYC wrote: Thanks. Two questions on this one. So in the conclusion "can result" means there can be a causal relationship? Is *can result* equivalent to *it is likely* or it is *probable*? Also, when the stimulus tells me "regular drinkers are more likely to develop kidney damage" - does this suggest a correlation or already this suggests a causation? Also I notice that the right answer choice uses *many* instead of *most* people, although I understand that it also provides an alternate cause. Sorry I feel that it's all a mix in my head now. Thanks again!
Nope - you absolutely have to go back to the passage. No way around it - it's how you guarantee correct answers.Hotguy wrote:BP, I seem to be having trouble with RC passages that have(to me) a lot of details(for example, pt62 s1,p3 A/B). Can you give me any pointers on what to do to keep better track of overall details? Aside from going back to the passage.
Good advice. Thank you!bp shinners wrote:Nope - you absolutely have to go back to the passage. No way around it - it's how you guarantee correct answers.Hotguy wrote:BP, I seem to be having trouble with RC passages that have(to me) a lot of details(for example, pt62 s1,p3 A/B). Can you give me any pointers on what to do to keep better track of overall details? Aside from going back to the passage.
Will that take time? Yep. But it's better than sitting there for 45 seconds, agonizing over 2 answer choices.
You can save time by:
1) Knowing what specific details they ask about (for instance, they almost never care about dates)
2) Tagging each paragraph/section of paragraph so that you can find the relevant info quickly.
Those specific questions require you to spend time finding the answer in the passage, but then it should only take you 5-10 seconds to find the actual answer. So you need to have the important details pulled out (lists of characteristics, causal relationships, answers to questions, examples). And you need to tag the passage so you can find details that it pulls out randomly (which it does sometimes) - for instance, if you have a paragraph tagged "Imagery in Kahlo's work", you should be able to find the answer to a specific question about her work in that paragraph in a few seconds.
First off, this is the important thing - feeling comfortable that you can answer every question correctly unless you make a stupid mistake (of which I include misreading). You need to get to that point before anything else can progress.jaylawyer09 wrote:p.s.: I feel relatively comfortable doing games and only get questions wrong when I mis read a rule, or if I misread a question.
Some times, I'll get a game that I am clueless on how to approach it. However, I use 7sage to clear everything up. But most of the time, I understand the games.
I probably wouldn't start with 1 since there are a lot of weird games in the early ones. Depending on how much practice you want, I'd probably start with 20 or 30. I would redo a lot of them, though, especially since you didn't time yourself the first time through.Question 1: Should I redo all the games from 1-40 after I finish, even if I just drilled them with the BP LG? (I feel i need to do them because the 7sage method tell you to do like 10 copies of each) , or should I just move on the LR and so a section every week? I just did each game once, and did a few again if they gave me trouble.
Based on your feeling that you get everything right unless you misread something, now.Question 2: also, I have not timed myself doing these games. When should I start timing?
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Glad to hear it! If you have any ways we could improve it, let me know and I'll pass it on. And if any other questions pop up, feel free to post here or shoot me a PM.jaylawyer09 wrote:I began yesterday timing my self and it going good. BP LG is amazing.
Exactly right. That could be a correct answer, but I wouldn't expect the LSAT to phrase it that way.dreamofNYC wrote: I know that we can switch the some statements, but in this case how would we do that? Can we for example say some that are not lawyers are athletes.
Nope! "Some" statements you can flip around, but you can't take a contrapositive.Also can we take the contra positive of this statement, and say some lawyers Are not athletes?
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bp shinners wrote:Exactly right. That could be a correct answer, but I wouldn't expect the LSAT to phrase it that way.dreamofNYC wrote: I know that we can switch the some statements, but in this case how would we do that? Can we for example say some that are not lawyers are athletes.
Nope! "Some" statements you can flip around, but you can't take a contrapositive.Also can we take the contra positive of this statement, and say some lawyers Are not athletes?
Quick rundown:
All/None statement - you can take the original and contrapositive
Most statement - you can take the original
Some statement - you can take the original and the converse (just flip it around)
In all honesty, the big take-away from this question is that you can combine two "all" statements using something other than the transitive property (A->B, B->C, therefore A->C) - you can treat them as quantifiers and combine them to get the "some" statement. That's the limit of what I would expect from a question using a similar structure/logic.
Can you give me a quick 1-2 word description of which questions these are? We use PT59 as a PT for the course, so my copy of it is out of order (we insert a 5th section).dreamofNYC wrote:PT 59, section 2, q 20
Aren't answer choices B and D saying the exact same thing?? I was debating between the two and fell for the wrong one.
Thank you!
Pt 59, section 2, q 21
I always seem to get this question wrong and I did it 10 times already. I feel like both answers D and E are correct. E) refers to the 1st two sentences only. Whereas D refers to the last sentence only. So both are correct. Help!!
Thank you
I'll buy thatcrestor wrote:BP, i think I did well on october 5 but I want to hedge my bases and want to start studying for december. haven't looked at anything lsat related since that day. i go to the library to study like I usually do at noonish. apparently the middle school reserved the entire library. hopefully this is a sign.
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Yes!bp shinners wrote:Can you give me a quick 1-2 word description of which questions these are? We use PT59 as a PT for the course, so my copy of it is out of order (we insert a 5th section).dreamofNYC wrote:PT 59, section 2, q 20
Aren't answer choices B and D saying the exact same thing?? I was debating between the two and fell for the wrong one.
Thank you!
Pt 59, section 2, q 21
I always seem to get this question wrong and I did it 10 times already. I feel like both answers D and E are correct. E) refers to the 1st two sentences only. Whereas D refers to the last sentence only. So both are correct. Help!!
Thank you
Alright so B and D on this one actually say quite different things.dreamofNYC wrote: T 59, section 2, q 20 begins with "Quality control investigator: Upon testing samples..." and talks about biased sample selection.
Ah, alright, so we have the flaw question answer constructs!I encountered a similar question during the next test T 60, Section 3, Q 16 "Wildlife management experts should not interfere with the natural habitats of creatures in the wild..." there is a similar trap answer here answer "D". So there are tempting but wrong answers that say the author assumes something which she shouldn't (i.e., presumes, without providing justification), whereas the correct answer choice says that the author did not assume "i.e., failed to consider". I cannot put my finger on the "pattern" exactly, if there is one. If you could further cast some clarity on these nuances, I'd be grateful!
They definitely refer to different things - that's how most answer choices are going to work!T 59, section 2, q 23 begins with "This year a flood devastated a small river..." I don't understand why D is right and E is wrong. To me they refer to different sentences of the argument...
SoondreamofNYC wrote:BP, is it possible to estimate when PT 70 will be published?
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