"Which one of the following, if true, most justifies the above application of the principle?" - Is this Principle question or PSA?

"Which one of the following would be most useful to know in order to evaluate the argument?" - Sufficient Assumption? PSA?

These two appear on the later LSAT's and always give me pause and I'm not sure how to attack them...

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5 comments

  • Friday, Jan 19 2018

    @gregoryalexanderdevine723 said:

    @btsao339 said:

    J.Y. gave the second stem its own category: Resolve/reconcile/explain. These kinds of questions actually appear frequently in the early LSATs too.

    This is in my understanding incorrect. These questions are "evaluate" questions. PT 36--1-24 is an example of one. Our job on these questions is to ask the question that if answered to one extreme weakens the reasoning in the argument and if answered to the other extreme strengthens the reasoning in the argument. Mr. Ping says in the review of the question cited above that these are essentially combination weaken/strengthen questions. I agree to with this, from my experience with these questions. These questions are quite different from RRE questions.

    David

    I agree with David. The second one is an “Evaluate” question!

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  • Friday, Jan 19 2018

    Thanks everyone! Appreciate all the help and clarity :)

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  • Friday, Jan 19 2018

    @70586 said:

    "Which one of the following, if true, most justifies the above application of the principle?" - Is this Principle question or PSA?

    "Which one of the following would be most useful to know in order to evaluate the argument?" - Sufficient Assumption? PSA?

    These two appear on the later LSAT's and always give me pause and I'm not sure how to attack them...

    Here are the links to JY's lesson on both principle questions

    https://classic.7sage.com/lesson/principle-questions-are-sa-questions-in-reverse/

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  • Friday, Jan 19 2018

    @btsao339 said:

    J.Y. gave the second stem its own category: Resolve/reconcile/explain. These kinds of questions actually appear frequently in the early LSATs too.

    This is in my understanding incorrect. These questions are "evaluate" questions. PT 36--1-24 is an example of one. Our job on these questions is to ask the question that if answered to one extreme weakens the reasoning in the argument and if answered to the other extreme strengthens the reasoning in the argument. Mr. Ping says in the review of the question cited above that these are essentially combination weaken/strengthen questions. I agree to with this, from my experience with these questions. These questions are quite different from RRE questions.

    David

    1
  • Friday, Jan 19 2018

    The first stem is a principle question. It's simply asking you to make sure the example in the application mirrors the principle.

    J.Y. gave the second stem its own category: Resolve/reconcile/explain. These kinds of questions actually appear frequently in the early LSATs too.

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