I remember vaguely a teacher in high school telling us to read the answers from E to A for the ACT. Could the same apply for the LSAT? I feel like A is a common place for trap answers.
... to easily eliminate B and C. B addressees a comparative issue ... addressed in the stimulus. Meanwhile, C simply did nothing for the ... would you negate answer choice "E"
sch. c=.. fail to consider the human ... private insurance so I picked (C)
Maybe I don't ... />
My suspicion of why C is wrong is that Dr ... examples that Dr.Sch provided. (e.g. treatments are not rationed ...
... irrelevant to the argument C)"Expert opinion" is not relevant ... relevant in this argument E) Last year's count does ... />
The correct answer was E. I understand that both A ... and E aren't perfect solutions (otherwise ...
... is the difference between AC C and E?
Both ACs look ... form, but is it because C says needs of the city ... as a whole while E just says that serves an ... this sense, both AC C and E seem to be performing the ...
... didn't get why (C) was the non-weakening A ... /C, but it finally clicked ... getting. In another words, (C) is assuming that these (few ... questions) are wrong b/c of these types of sudden ... leaps (i.e., premises and conclusions talking ...