This question was discussed as part of a more general thread. Here's the link:
post920.html#p920
christinachenn Wrote:I understand why the correct answer is D. However, I would like an explanation for why B and E is wrong. Is B wrong because "inherited diseases" is too far a stretch from the absence "good health"? In the real world, it's not, but does this answer require an extra assumption and that's why it's wrong?
ohthatpatrick Wrote:Great questions.
In terms of (A), making your tweak would definitely improve it, putting the language shift into the proper
Prem --> Conc
order.
But, remember, "presumes w/o justification" just means "Necessary Assumption".
On Necessary Assumption, we're dubious of extreme language.
Saying the author "presumes that all highly educated people make informed lifestyle choices" seems to me more extreme than anything this author says.
The author is clearly associating one with the other, so it would be correct to say that the author "presumes that at least some highly educated people make informed lifestyle choices", but the language of this argument isn't harsh enough to accuse the author of assuming that ALL highly educated people make informed choices.
To your second point/question ... YES, that's what makes Flaw questions late in an LR section so tough. A lot of times there are multiple flaws, and if we only focus on language shifts (which LSAT probably considers the easier type of flaw to spot), we'll not have the others on our radar).
What I typically do, when I see a language shift is initially say, "Alright, well he's definitely assuming that X is associated with Y."
But then I say, "Let me assume for a second that X is associated with Y. Is there any other flaw?"
It's a weird skill, but Flaw essentially forces us to figure out what argument an author was trying to make before we then tear it down. So sometimes we have to play along with a language shift, because we know the author was trying to use those two ideas more or less interchangeably.
Hope this helps.
ohthatpatrick Wrote:LSAT wanted us to interpret this argument as
"correlation between X and Y" (good health & high ed. levels)
thus,
"X is largely the result of Y" (good health is largely the result of informed lifestyles ... i.e. high ed. levels)
If you re-read some of the earlier posts, many people were bothered by this stretch of equating
high ed. levels = informed lifestyle choices