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Agreed. I chose correctly on this one as it just seemed the best of the bad answers. But, I was thinking If I were a child in self-defense mode, in this situation... I'm batting it down not going for the interception.
The 7Sage curriculum is what you pay for. LSAC owns the material. Think of it as if Sage is the college course and LSAC is the book. I hope this helps.
This one is weird to me even though I chose the correct answer. This answer is a restatement of a premise. We have been told to not choose answers that restate a premise. #feedback.
More than half would be "most" (think majority). Fewer than half is "some"
It would also require a high burden of proof to say he had no knowledge. We all should know how this one plays out in court for this particular dumba. That is where we have to determine whether or not the assumption is reasonable or not. A tough one to use as an example, for sure.
This section is the conventional "If ----> Then" conditional. If X, Then Y. Conversely, If Not Y, then Not X.
I think some further lessons answered my question. Assumptions are the "unspokens" that are like reading between the lines of the premises. We don't use them to question what is in the premises, but what could possibly be "between" them and the conclusion that could either strengthen or weaken the argument.
Just for clarification... Arguments can be anywhere on the spectrum from weak to strong based on the reasonability of their support. We have been taught not to question the premises, though. Could someone please help me define the difference between questioning reasonability of support and questioning the premise itself.
I am also using the Loophole. I am wondering how people are using the 7Sage curriculum in time with the Loophole book? By this I mean to ask, are people generally doing one or the other first or is there a hack for which point to be in both modalities, at a certain time that works for people?
Personally, I started with the loophole book and mad it to Chapter 5 before my fee waiver came through, and I signed up for 7Sage. Now I'm feeling like this is a bit of a review with a twist (in the best way).
I came here to give this #feedback as well. I like to use the quick view before watching the video to try the question on my own, which saves a lot of time if I don't need the explanation through the video. This change in QS was confusing at the very least.