http://7sage.com/lsat_explanations/lsat-38-section-4-question-14/I have questions about (B) and (D)
First of all, an answer choice like (B), "ignore the possibility of benefits from lowering speed limits "other than" environmental and safety benefits.
I can see sometimes it's a right answer because a flaw is an author doesn't consider other factors except for the factors mentioned in a stimulus. But sometimes it's a wrong answer because it's out of scope just like Q.14.
So I can't really find out what kind of stimulus should be if an answer choice like (B) is a right answer.
Whenever I encounter an answer choice like (B), I'm always stuck.
Lastly, about (D), how is it still a right answer? Shouldn't it say both saving lives and protecting the environment just like the author says?
I mean it only says about "protecting the environment" and doesn't say about "saving lives". So that's why I entirely don't understand why D is an answer.
Can anyone explain me?
Thanks!
Comments
On D - this is one correct answer. I think you're right that it only addresses the flawed connection between one of the premises and the conclusion. This could just as easily say that it "fails to consider that collisions would be less dangerous at lower speeds", which I think would also be correct. But that it only addresses one of the premises doesn't make it incorrect I think, especially since there's no better answer.
I don't think (D) is logically correct. What do you think? Here is what I thought during my PT and also during my review:
The argument doesn’t assume that total emissions are determined PRIMARILY by the amount of time the trip takes- it just assumes that the total emissions for a car trip is determined more by time on the road than it is by driving speed. The primary determinant could be like engine size or something, and as long as the total emissions is determined more by time on the road than by driving speed, the argument could still work, so this is barely not the flaw.
Since I eliminated (D), I chose (A) because it seemed the argument jumped from "speed limits" to "driving speed", and I figured it was the closest thing to a right answer.
This flaw is now so easy to spot!