Can you clarify the arguments? It looks like you're asking for examples of missing assumptions that link a single variable (premise) to one of two totally different variables in the conclusions of these two arguments:
P: B
C: A --> C
P: A
…
Or is this information that we can draw upon when sentences get tough and are not sure what the sentence even means?
I think you nailed it here! I’ve been studying now for five months and go back to the grammar lessons every month or so for a r…
Check out this thread- they posted cheat sheets with valid and invalid arguments that might be helpful
https://7sage.com/discussion/#/discussion/32892/cheatsheet-for-valid-argument-forms-1-9
For the last month or so I've been underlining the main conclusion in every stimulus, initially because I was bad at identifying conclusions, so I did that until I got it every single time. But I've also realized how much it helps me with assumption…
How far are you from the score you want to apply with, and how much progress have you made from where you started? If you're at a 172 and want a 180 but aren't in any rush to apply, that's a very different situation than wanting to apply asap but on…
I wouldn't worry about the PT test scores at this point. Unless you're confident that you know what the test is asking for in any which way it's asked, your PT scores won't reflect your actual ability. My scores went up by 15+ points in just the fir…
Reading how you thought through the answer choices, it seems you're looking for any and all gaps in the argument, but this question isn't asking you to do that (and trust that test writers will throw in answer choices to trip up those who don't unde…
When you click on the PrepTest you want to take from the list, it then opens the start screen where you'll see buttons for each section. Click on the dropdown menu to the right of the PT# and select "August 2024 3-Section LSAT (LR, LR, RC)" so when…
To put simply, background or contextual information is something that is not a premise (because it doesn’t support a conclusion) and is not a conclusion. That means it could be contextual if it elaborates on a premise or conclusion, or not (i.e. it …
Assuming you’re able to identify a conclusion from at least one other premise provided, ask yourself “why does the author want me to believe this?” about that conclusion. If you can answer that with “because (insert possible premise,” then that piec…
LR Perfection by Dragon Test Prep is tedious but a total game changer because it focuses only on the most difficult questions with the idea that if you dissect those first you and learn the logical errors you make when you get them wrong. I’m a few …