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Saturday, Oct 14 2017

Can anyone clarify why E is correct?

I chose E indirectly after eliminating other four answer choices.

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Explanation for other answers:

[DIAGRAM]

Artist --most-> Hold less insightful political views than well educated non-artist

Artist statement --few-> Artistic talent =/= Political insight

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[ANSWER CHOICES]

A ) Non-artist?

B ) Thorough education?

C ) Again, non-artist?

D ) Politicians?

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Thank you in advance!

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4 comments

  • Sunday, Apr 02 2023

    Note to self: "Most" on the LSAT includes the possibility of "All." The "rarely" in this question thus must mean "sometimes."

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  • Saturday, Oct 14 2017

    @akikookmt881 @jhaldy10325 Thank you both!

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  • Saturday, Oct 14 2017

    Yeah, it's definitely the "rarely." This is a clever construction. They set us up with a bias so that we mistake what the last line actually says. Read "rarely" as a "some" statement that's excluding the "most" range. If I tell you that my dog rarely bites people, you're going to infer some overlap with "my dog" and "bites people." In that example, it's the exact same thing except your bias is primed to make the overlap rather than to ignore it. It works the same way though.

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  • Saturday, Oct 14 2017

    You are right that all the other ACs are obviously wrong, but I can't figure out how (E) must be true either.

    I feel like this question implies that:

    Most of X are Y = Some of X are not Y.

    But most includes all....I guess the word "rarely" in the last sentence may be the key. It implies that artistic talent and political insight are sometimes found together. If anything, I think this question should be an MSS question.

    This is interesting, so I would like to hear what @jhaldy10325 thinks! (or @jhaldy10325 even...!)

    This test is from the final year of the Cold War....so it's very, very old.

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