LSAT 146 – Section 3 – Question 18
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Target time: 1:08
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Question QuickView |
Type | Tags | Answer Choices |
Curve | Question Difficulty |
Psg/Game/S Difficulty |
Explanation |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
PT146 S3 Q18 |
+LR
| Main conclusion or main point +MC Causal Reasoning +CausR Net Effect +NetEff | A
1%
154
B
3%
155
C
47%
167
D
39%
162
E
9%
160
|
157 165 173 |
+Hardest | 146.758 +SubsectionMedium |
J.Y.’s explanation
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Summarize Argument
Retailers make use of advertised price cuts to attract consumers more often than they should. Why are such price cuts a problem? Because they lower profits and undermine customer loyalty.
Identify Conclusion
The conclusion is the author’s stance on retailers’ behavior: “too often they resort to using advertised price cuts to promote their wares.”
A
Feeling lucky is the most enjoyable emotional experience garnered from shopping.
This is context that helps to explain retailers’ motivation for using price cuts in the first place. This claim doesn’t receive support from anywhere else in the stimulus, so it cannot be the conclusion.
B
Retailers take advantage of the fact that shoppers enjoy feeling lucky.
This is context that helps to explain retailers’ motivation for using price cuts in the first place. This claim doesn’t receive support from anywhere else in the stimulus, so it cannot be the conclusion.
C
Advertised price cuts are overused as a means of gaining retail sales.
This accurately paraphrases the main conclusion. The author believes that retailers use advertised price cuts “too often” in order to attract sales.
D
Using advertised price cuts to promote retail products reduces profit margins and undermines customer loyalty.
This is the author’s premise. These two downsides of using advertised price cuts support the conclusion that such price cuts are used more often than they should be.
E
Making consumers feel lucky is usually not a good formula for retail success.
This is an overgeneralization of the main conclusion. The author merely concludes that one specific way of making consumers feel lucky—namely, advertised price cuts—is used too often. She doesn’t raise any concerns with the broader principle of making consumers feel lucky.
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LSAT PrepTest 146 Explanations
Section 1 - Logical Reasoning
- Question 01
- Question 02
- Question 03
- Question 04
- Question 05
- Question 06
- Question 07
- Question 08
- Question 09
- Question 10
- Question 11
- Question 12
- Question 13
- Question 14
- Question 15
- Question 16
- Question 17
- Question 18
- Question 19
- Question 20
- Question 21
- Question 22
- Question 23
- Question 24
- Question 25
Section 2 - Logical Reasoning
- Question 01
- Question 02
- Question 03
- Question 04
- Question 05
- Question 06
- Question 07
- Question 08
- Question 09
- Question 10
- Question 11
- Question 12
- Question 13
- Question 14
- Question 15
- Question 16
- Question 17
- Question 18
- Question 19
- Question 20
- Question 21
- Question 22
- Question 23
- Question 24
- Question 25
- Question 26
Section 3 - Logical Reasoning
- Question 01
- Question 02
- Question 03
- Question 04
- Question 05
- Question 06
- Question 07
- Question 08
- Question 09
- Question 10
- Question 11
- Question 12
- Question 13
- Question 14
- Question 15
- Question 16
- Question 17
- Question 18
- Question 19
- Question 20
- Question 21
- Question 22
- Question 23
- Question 24
- Question 25
- Question 26
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