- Joined
- Apr 2025
- Subscription
- Free
I got this one wrong, but I think I would've chosen E if the stimulus didn't specifically say the law doesn't prohibit smoking in one's OWN home. Since if one is a housekeeper, and at their work place, they're at A home, but not their OWN home?
Maybe future lessons will tackle this, but again I worry that taking the time to think through all these lawgic translations will take up far too much time on test day. There must be some quicker ways to get through questions like this?
I totally understood how using lawgic here and chaining the conditionals yields the correct answer. Maybe future lessons will cover this, but I worry about relying on this method of drawing out the lawgic too much, as it was my understanding LSAC doesn't let you have scratch paper during the exam. Is there a trick to being able to easily do these lawgic translations in your head?
How can one determine which conditional indicator to use if a sentence contains more than one? Take question 3 for example, "NO myths would have been written down UNLESS they contained truths that people wanted subsequent generations to remember". "No" is a group 4 indicator, while "unless" is a group 3 indicator.