6 comments

  • Tuesday, Jun 12 2018

    @ashleighkong22327 I saw that method in a powerscore book where they said that you just substitute indicators till it makes sense...How do you pace yourself with that method

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  • Tuesday, Jun 12 2018

    Thank you for that....I forgot about that being covered

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  • Tuesday, Jun 12 2018

    Here is the link but I strongly suggest you go through that entire section from the very beginning. No point skipping around or you'll be asking lots of questions when most of them can be answered via the videos.

    https://classic.7sage.com/lesson/advanced-sub-conclusions-major-premises/

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  • Tuesday, Jun 12 2018

    To determine a sub conclusion vs a main conclusion I'll put one conclusion before the other and ask myself "why?" if the latter explains the former then the first is the main conclusion. I basically move them around until I figure this out if I get stuck.

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  • Monday, Jun 11 2018

    I went through those lessons again but I dont recall JY explaining the terminology he used.

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  • Monday, Jun 11 2018

    The question you ask is a vast one. Grammar, particularly grammar parsing are aspects of the LSAT that are necessary skills for a high score. This is covered well in the "Grammar" section of the core curriculum. Please see the lessons starting here:

    https://classic.7sage.com/lesson/grammar-subject-predicate-details/

    It is also beneficial to pay particularly close attention to argument part questions, including Mr. Ping's explanations of them.

    More to your point:

    A sub conclusion (often called a major premise) is a premise for a main conclusion that derives support from another premise.

    David

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