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This page shows a recording of a live class. We're working hard to create our standard, concise explanation videos for the questions in this PrepTest. Thank you for your patience!

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This page shows a recording of a live class. We're working hard to create our standard, concise explanation videos for the questions in this PrepTest. Thank you for your patience!

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Which one of the following most accurately expresses the main conclusion of the argument above?

This is a Main Conclusion question.

The stimulus involves a complex argument structure that involves three conclusions (three!). But, if you’ve practiced Main Conclusion questions, you might notice a cookie cutter structure that can help you see quickly what the main conclusion is.

Santayana recommends that we study history to avoid the mistakes of the past.

We first get context – in particular, other people’s position. Santayana says that we should study history to avoid the mistakes of the past.

What do you expect to see most of the time after getting other people’s position? The author’s view, which is likely the main conclusion. And, just as you’d expect, the author says: But we should not follow his advice.

That’s a clear disagreement with Santayana, and we should be thinking that it’s likely the main conclusion. We’ll confirm that in a moment when we continue reading.

But first, we have to translate the referential language. What does it mean to say that we should not follow Santayana’s advice? It means the negation of what Santayana said: “We should not study history to avoid the mistakes of the past.” Don’t confuse this with “We should not study history.” The author’s claim here is simply that we should not study history for the particular purpose of avoiding the mistakes of history.

Why is that something we should not do? Well, the author supports that recommendation with reasoning:

For, since history consists of unique and unrepeatable accidents, none of the crises we now face are the same as those our ancestors faced.

The word “for,” which is introducing the entire sentence, tells us that the entire sentence is support for the previous statement, which was the author’s recommendation. So right now, we should be thinking that the author’s recommendation still seems to be the main conclusion.

You can break down the sentence after the word “for,” although it is probably not necessary for identifying the main conclusion. The “since” is introducing support, and the other half of the sentence is the part that’s being supported – it would be an intermediate conclusion.

Then we get to the final sentence, which begins with the word “Thus.” So we know the last sentence is some kind of conclusion:

Thus, studying history never enables one to avoid mistakes of the past.

The question is whether the last sentence is the main conclusion of the argument, or whether the statement that “[W]e should not follow Santayana’s advice” is the main conclusion. At this point, we can see which of those statements makes more sense as support for the other. Observe:

Option #1

“Studying history never enables one to avoid mistakes of the past.”

Why should I believe that?

Because, “We should not study history to avoid the mistakes of the past.”

Hmm…does that make sense to you? Does the recommendation that we shouldn’t study history to avoid the mistakes of the past, help prove that studying history doesn’t enable you to avoid mistakes?

Option #2

“We should not study history to avoid the mistakes of the past.”

Why should I believe that?

Because, “Studying history never enables one to avoid mistakes of the past.”

This makes more sense, because the claim that something doesn’t work helps support the idea that we shouldn’t do that thing. Don’t do X. Why? Because X doesn’t work.

Option #2 makes more sense, so that means the author’s recommendation not to follow Santayana’s advice is the main conclusion. The last sentence is an intermediate conclusion being supported by the second to last sentence, which itself contains a premise and intermediate conclusion.

Here’s the argument laid out in logical order:

Sub-sub-premise: History consists of unique and unrepeatable accidents.

Sub-sub-conclusion: None of the crises we now face are the same as those our ancestors faced.

Sub-conclusion: Studying history never enables one to avoid mistakes of the past.

Main conclusion: We should not study history to avoid the mistakes of the past.

Answer Choice (A) People should not study history, since doing so leads them to misunderstand the crises they now face.

This is wrong for two reasons. First, remember that the main conclusion is that we should not study history for the purpose of avoiding mistakes. But the author never said that we should not study history at all – maybe it’s OK to study history for entertainment, or to learn more about different cultures. This answer, however, flat out says “We should not study history[.]” Although the answer does give us a reason for not studying history, it’s still saying flat out, that we should not study history. The reason given for not studying history does not limit the scope of the claim, “We should not study history[.]”

The second reason (A) is wrong is that the reason it gives for not studying history is not actually supported by the author’s argument. The author says that the events of the past are different from the events of today, and that therefore studying the past events isn’t helpful for avoiding mistakes. But that does not imply that studying the past leads to misunderstandings of the present. It could simply be that studying the past leads to nothing helpful, and we won’t find anything useful in it.

Answer Choice (B) Every historical period is different from every other historical period.

This relates to something the premise says, but not to the conclusion. In addition, the idea of historical periods being different from each other is not the same as past events being unique and unrepeatable. Maybe history consists of unique events, but an overall historical period can still be similar to another period?

Answer Choice (C) Although the crises one generation faces may appear to be the same as those another generation face, they never are.

This sounds like the line “none of the crises we now face are the same as the ones our ancestors faced.” But that wasn’t the main conclusion, only an intermediate conclusion. Furthermore, the author’s argument never implied the first half of this answer – “the crises one generation faces may appear to be the same as those another generation faces.” The author simply said that the crises of the past aren’t like the ones of the present, without any comment on whether they might appear to be similar.

Answer Choice (D) Studying history is valuable, but not for the reason that Santayana suggests.

If you picked this, you’re probably bringing in your own personal opinion to this question. Did the author of the argument in the stimulus ever suggest that studying history is valuable? Not at all. The author did say that we shouldn’t study history for the particular purpose of avoiding mistakes. And that does leave open the possibility that they think we should study for a different reason. But we don’t know whether the author actually thinks that we should study history for a different reason.

“You shouldn’t throw a pie in someone’s face to play a practical joke on them.”

Does that statement mean that we should throw a pie in someone’s face for some other reason? No – it leaves open that possibility, but it doesn’t provide affirmative support for that statement.

Correct Answer Choice (E) One should not try to avoid repeating the mistakes of previous generations by studying history.

This is a great paraphrase of the author’s conclusion that we should not follow Santayana’s advice. Of course, the LSAT does throw a few tricks in to make the answer harder to pick. It changes the order of the concepts, and uses different words that still fairly capture the author’s meaning.

We were expecting something along the lines of this: “We should not study history to avoid the mistakes of the past.”

(E) gives us this: “One should not try to avoid repeating the mistakes of past generations by studying history.”

These both express the idea that one thing we shouldn’t try to do is study history for the purpose of avoiding the mistakes of the past.

The fact that the concepts are reordered doesn’t change the meaning. Consider: “I love my dog” and “My dog is something I love” are expressing the same idea. Similarly, “You should study hard for the purpose of getting a good LSAT score” expresses the same idea as “You should try to get a good LSAT score by studying hard.”

In addition, “Mistakes of past generations” are “mistakes of the past.” Given the human context of this argument, what else could “mistakes of the past” refer to besides those of past people – also known as past generations? (We’re not studying the mistakes of bears, dolphins, or llamas.)


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Santayana recommends that we study history to avoid the mistakes of the past. But we should not follow his advice. For, since history consists of unique and unrepeatable accidents, none of the crises we now face are the same as those our ancestors faced. Thus, studying history never enables one to avoid mistakes of the past.

Summarize Argument: Counter-Position
The author rejects Santayana’s recommendation that we should study history to avoid the mistakes of the past. Studying history doesn’t allow us to avoid the mistakes of the past, so it doesn’t make sense to study history for the purpose of avoiding those mistakes.

Identify Conclusion
The conclusion is the author’s rejection of Santayana’s recommendation: “we should not follow his advice.”

A
People should not study history, since doing so leads them to misunderstand the crises they now face.
This twists the conclusion. The author never suggested that we shouldn’t study history at all. Rather, he argued that we shouldn’t study it for the purpose of learning from mistakes. It might be OK to study it for another reason.
B
Every historical period is different from every other historical period.
This doesn’t capture the author’s rejection of Santayana’s recommendation. It’s also unclear whether the author ever discussed historical “periods” as opposed to historical events.
C
Although the crises one generation faces may appear to be the same as those another generation faces, they never are.
This relates to the premise and doesn’t capture the conclusion. Also, the author never suggested that the crises of one generation may look similar to those of another generation.
D
Studying history is valuable, but not for the reason that Santayana suggests.
This is never stated or implied, so it can’t be the conclusion. The author never suggested studying history is valuable.
E
One should not try to avoid repeating the mistakes of previous generations by studying history.
This is a paraphrase of the claim that we should not follow Santayana’s advice.

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One can be at home and be in the backyard, that is, not in one’s house at all. One can also be in one’s house but not at home, if one owns the house but rents it out to others, for example. So one’s being at home is not required for one’s being in one’s own house.

Summarize Argument
The author claims that “one’s being at home is not required for one’s being in one’s own house.” To back up this claim, we are offered an example: if you visit a house that you own but rent to someone else, you can be in your house but not at home (because it’s someone else’s home).

Identify Argument Part
The claim that one can be at home without being at one’s house doesn’t actually form part of the argument. Instead, it’s a piece of context that introduces the substance of the argument. Because the conclusion only focuses on being in one’s house without being at home, being at home without being at one’s house is ultimately irrelevant to the conclusion.

A
The claim is required to establish the conclusion.
The claim about being at home without being in your house doesn’t actually support the conclusion at all, because the conclusion is just about being in your house without being at home. That means it can’t be essential for the conclusion.
B
The claim represents the point the conclusion is intended to refute.
The author never states a point that the conclusion is meant to refute; the argument isn’t aimed against anything.
C
The claim is compatible with the truth or falsity of the conclusion.
This accurately describes the claim about being at home without being in your house. True or false, it doesn’t affect the conclusion, which is just about being in your house without being at home. If you removed this claim from the stimulus, it wouldn’t change anything.
D
The claim points out an ambiguity in the phrase “at home.”
The author never claims that the phrase “at home” is ambiguous. The argument is meant to establish an unexpected relationship between being at home and being in your house, which is possible because each of those concepts is clear.
E
The claim inadvertently contradicts the conclusion.
The claim about being at home without being in your house doesn’t contradict the conclusion at all. It’s entirely possible for both statements to be true; neither interferes with the other.

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News item: The result of a recent public survey has been called into question because one of the pollsters admitted to falsifying data. The survey originally concluded that most people in the country favor investing more money in information technologies. Because falsified data were included in the survey, its conclusion is not true; a majority does not favor more investment in information technologies.

A
the conclusion of the survey would be verified if the falsified data were excluded
This is a key possibility that the news item doesn’t consider. Regardless of the falsified data being included in the survey, it’s still possible that the majority of people in the country favor more investment in information technologies.
B
the conclusion of the survey will be accepted by the public even though falsified data were used
Whether or not the conclusion of the survey will be accepted by the public is irrelevant. We’re only concerned with whether the news item’s conclusion is sound.
C
other pollsters in other surveys also may have falsified data
The actions of pollsters in other surveys have no bearing on whether the recent public survey’s conclusion is true.
D
some people who responded to the survey were lying
We don’t know if the news item failed to consider this, but even if it didn’t, this isn’t a possible reason that the news item’s conclusion, that a majority of people in the country don’t favor more investment in information technologies, is flawed.
E
people’s opinions about investing in information technologies can change as new technologies develop
It doesn’t matter whether people’s opinions can change. We’re concerned with the news item’s argument about the current public opinion on investment in information technologies.

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