agersh144 Wrote:I spent a ton of time during blind review and I just couldn't figure this one out -- how can the LSAT say that "some" means "not all" - that's a textbook mistake on the LSAT is it not? If it's some we just don't know whether it's 1 person or whether its 100% -- "some" is vague so we cannot say "others served exclusively in one court or the other" that's not sufficiently supported by the wording of the text.'
How can they just ignore the methodology they expect students to be cognizant of throughout the test for a critically important answer choice that is the correct answer after all and then expect students to be aware of it and employ that same principle in other sections (i.e. regarding the importance of quantifiers and modality) and expect student to do well if they don't even abide by the same darn basic rules of logic and grammar? This is so frustrating, what a twisted way to torment tired and weary LSAT students!
I feel your pain on this one! I think the fact that there were "counterparts" in the courts gives this answer some support, and the author doesn't say that all the personnel overlapped, which he or she would most likely do if that were the case. In essence, why would anyone compare the two groups of lawyers if they were not distinct groups.
I'm not crazy about defending this answer, but that's what us civil lawyers must do.