PrepTest 140

[lcid:3656] Prep Test 140 LSAT — Logical Reasoning — S1 Logical reasoning

Question prompt

Lawyer: If you take Remaining source text redacted.
Why the credited answer is right

Credited answer: C

The notes below walk through why it fits the stem and how to eliminate the rest.

Question Type

Errors in Reasoning Questions / Sufficient & Necessary Questions

Answer choices

  1. A
    confuses a factual claim Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice A is not credited
    Incorrect. The argument establishes a relationship between factual statements and moral judgments, so it doesn't assume a connection.
  2. B
    takes for granted that Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice B is not credited
    Incorrect. The argument speaks to Meyers' action, not to what he would have done in another scenario, so this answer is out of scope.
  3. C
    takes a condition that Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice C matches the stem
    Correct. Argument or Facts:
    Argument

    Valid or Flawed:
    Flawed

    Question Type:
    Errors in Reasoning

    Stimulus Summary:
    Take something you believe is someone else's → Stealing → Wrong
    Meyers: not Believe someone else's
    Conclusion: Meyers action wasn't wrong

    Answer Anticipation:
    Conditional language in an Errors in Reasoning question frequently leads to an illegal reversal or negation. Here, the Lawyer's conditional establishes what guarantees an action is wrong, but she then concludes that not doing that thing means the action isn't wrong. That's an illegal negation, so let's find an answer describing that flaw.

    Answer Explanation:
    While this answer choice is how illegal reversals are usually phrased, it applies here. The argument establishes that believing something belongs to someone else and taking it anyway, by itself, guarantees that an action is wrong. Then, it treats it as necessary for something to be wrong since it treats the absence of doing that as establishing that the action wasn't wrong. If something is necessary for a given outcome, then not having it precludes that outcome.

    Key Takeaway:
    This answer shows the connection between illegal reversal and negations—they're the contrapositive of each other. To see this, think about the connection:
    Original: A → B
    Negation: not A → not B
    Reversal: B → A

    Since the two are related, the LSAT will sometimes blur the edges around them in the answers, so be ready for it if you don't see an answer that matches the exact conditional logic flaw you anticipated.
  4. D
    fails to consider the Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice D is not credited
    Incorrect. If the compost was Meyers' property, then it wasn't anyone else's property, which is what the stimulus states, so there's no failure to consider this possibility.
  5. E
    concludes that something is Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice E is not credited
    Incorrect. The argument doesn't conclude or rely on the compost being someone else's property—it only relies on Meyers not having a reason to believe it was.

What this tests

Discussion

  • answer? 3 replies

    Started by Lucas

  • confused on e 1 reply

    Started by Elizabeth25

  • I choose B 1 reply

    Started by janabasha