3 comments

  • Saturday, Feb 03 2018

    Glad you found it helpful :smiley:

    @akikookmt881 said:

    I figured an heirloom might still end up in a tomb, never know.

    That is true. I think (B) doesn't conclusively falsify the hypothesis. As you point out, it could be true that it somehow ended up accidentally in the tomb.

    But (B) makes us doubt the hypothesis. That's enough to "weaken" the argument.

    (E) doesn't weaken it because we don't really care what it "symbolizes." It could symbolize anything and could still be used as a communal object.

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  • Saturday, Feb 03 2018

    Ok that is helpful. I appreciate your response! I don't know that I would have ever caught that. I figured an heirloom might still end up in a tomb, never know.

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  • Saturday, Feb 03 2018

    https://classic.7sage.com/lsat_explanations/lsat-73-section-2-question-19/

    A carved flint (human head with open mouth) was found in a tomb in Ireland.

    https://i.pinimg.com/236x/da/f6/1f/daf61f97ad6598d078bcb063c5ce4797--irish-art-human-faces.jpg

    • It is too small to be a weapon

    • Its open mouth symbolizes speaking.

    Hypothesis: The object was probably a communal object (the head of a speaking staff)

    The argument says the object found in the tomb is a communal object, but (B) tells us that communal objects are probably not found in tombs since they are passed from one generation to the next.

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