... with the answer choice. Basic assumption questions will have a small ... choice will fill perfectly. Sufficient assumption questions will fill it as ... correct answer for a sufficient assumption could be..... Anyone who owns ...
... presumption that a necessary assumption of the argument is ... providing support for a necessary assumption. Second, through the ... of consideration that the necessary assumption is false.
I remember my old lsat prep course providing us a percentages pie chart of all the question types. I believe assumption types are probably the most prevalent.
The answer choice (A) is an assumption that justifies the conclusion, but potentially there could be other reasons. So (A) is a sufficient assumption for the conclusion, not a necessary one.
Yes, I overstated it by saying the conclusion is justified. It is what the question refers to it as - a principle underlying the conclusion. I guess you can look at it as 'pseudo-sufficient'.
... correct. Its under the necessary assumption lessons in the main syllabus ... feel for what a necessary assumption really is and then come ... understanding of what a sufficient assumption is as well, which will ...
... 'if', much like a sufficient assumption question. They also often use ... strengthening answer and a sufficient assumption answer (not traditional-strength support ... of similar to a necessary assumption in alot of ways. JY ...
I thinks that logic games are good to repeat. That's what I do, and the games which I have not done for a couple of months are like new to me. On LR, probably assumption questions, and any formal logic questions are ok to repeat.
One quick note that might help you is that I often find myself falling for answer choices that are sufficient (but not necessary) for necessary assumption questions. They are really attractive! So I try to be on guard against them.
... in other 'easier' questions, the assumption you need to make in ... weak argument. Supplying a necessary assumption plugs up a potential hole ... ; strengthening, or providing a necessary assumption, simply makes it less crappy.