I suppose the title is self-explanatory, but I ran across a question in particular (LSAT 58, Section 4, Question 21) regarding lottery winners and television viewers. I ALMOST selected "D" but felt it was just too close to the conclusion to be the right answer. Essentially, I figured the answer choice was just restating the conclusion. As a result, I went with "B" even though I had reservations (this alone should have prevented me from selecting "B").
So down to it: will an Assumption Question answer choice ever feature a restating of the conclusion or premise? Or will the seemingly like sentence simply be a minute assumption that demands a more detailed eye? Hope this question makes sense, and I look forward to anyone's help!
Comments
Premise 2: The media extensively covers the few people that win the lottery.
Conclusion: It's likely that many people over-estimate their chances of winning a major jackpot.
There's a pretty big gap between the premises and the conclusion; namely, does having at least some awareness of the few people that win the lottery make people over-estitmate their chances of winning? We can conclude from the premises the most people have some awareness of the few people that win the lottery, but we have no idea what kind of impact that knowledge has their beliefs about the lottery itself.
Answer choice D addresses the gap in the argument: at least some folks incorrectly estimate their odds when they learn about someone else winning. If we negate the answer and learn that nobody overestimates their chances because of this, the argument falls apart. This is sign of a necessary assumption, and we can be pretty confident in our answer.
Not exactly sure if I've answered your question. D addresses the gap in the argument, and certainly revolves around the stimulus, but I don't think it's restating the conclusion.