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EEM
Joined
Jun 2025
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LSAT
172
CAS GPA
Not provided
1L START YEAR
2027

Discussions

PrepTests ·
PT137.S4.Q23
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EEM
Saturday, Mar 7

I originally got this question wrong by choosing AC D. This helped explain the difference in death rates. However, this is NOT what we are asked to reconcile even though it is tempting to do so. We are asked to reconcile the deaths of XYZ and P and not any other fish. AC A and AC E do not distinguish between XYZ and P and other fish. AC C gives explanation only for P and we are tempted to extrapolate to XYZ because they eat P. AC D gives explanation only for XYZ and we are tempted to choose it because it explains an irrelevant (for our purposes) mystery about the relative rates. Hence, only B explains specific reasons for XYZ and P.

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Edited Saturday, Jan 31

EEM

😖 Frustrated

Answered Multiple Times

Hi. I have finished all the questions, and I want to exclude questions that I have now seen 2 or 3 or 4 times. The algorithm keeps giving these to me, which means I keep seeing the same questions over and over again. Can you make a feature for selecting questions where you can say, answered less than twice or answered less than __ times? Thank you.

3
PrepTests ·
PT154.S3.P2.Q11
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EEM
Monday, Jan 5

I find that the support for AC A is in the first few sentences of Passage B. Passage B says, "I am always astonished at how falsely I remember things, astonished at how unreliable memory is. AND EVEN WHEN I KNOW A MEMORY IS INCORRECT ... " This suggests that Passage B is only dealing with those instances when the author clearly identifies that a memory is false, which means that there are instances in which mistakes of the unintentional variety occur. The author's characterization of such cases is attributed to the falsity of memory, which the author characterizes as an inevitability rather than something "unforgivable."

1
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EEM
Sunday, Jul 20, 2025

These answers, specifically in the stimulus and for answer choice A, should be edited. The author does not rely on the truth of a claim by a biased source. The author does not touch the truthfulness of the chocolate claim or the oily food claim. It treats these reports as events when it concludes, "almost any food will be reported to be healthful." Reported makes no comment on the truthfulness of the claim. So the biased source error does not occur.

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