by kylelitfin Sat Nov 26, 2011 7:02 am
This is the first trap question of the section. Look at questions 8 and 9, they both contain lengthy stimuli and fairly lengthy answer choices. However, both of the questions previously were fairly simple once you read through everything. So what did the LSAT writers do? They throw in a really small stimulus right after that hinges on a small phrase "comfort or safety" - in addition to throwing in a bit of sociology on us with "social inertia".
Here is the argument:
History has shown us that people have benefitted, in regards to working conditions, from the very technological innovations they resisted.
Conclusion: Social inertia is a stronger force determining human behavior than the desire for comfort or safety.
So what does that conclusion mean? That people resist technological innovations out of habit. It's something they have always resisted and will continue to do so even though their working conditions have improved because of these innovations.
How do we weaken this? Well via pre-phrasing, you should now be looking for something that shows that people have resisted technological innovations out of the desire for comfort or safety.
A). Job loss? That's pretty much the quintessential attack of ones comfort and safety. What good are improved working conditions to those that were laid off? Thus, if you adopt this stance you disprove the conclusion: social inertia is not the main cause in peoples resistance to technological innovation, it's job loss, a direct assault on their comfort and safety.
You chose D, so let's look at why that choice is wrong:
D.) For this to weaken the stimulus, there would have to be something stated in the stimulus indicating that the innovations in question were brought on very quickly. The stimulus provides no timeline. The innovations in question could have been unleashed over decades - you have no way of knowing. Therefore, it's out of scope and should be eliminated.
Hopefully this helps! Good luck!