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Watch expert LSAT tutor, Stefan Maisnier, demonstrate how to proactively identify the main conclusion of a Logical Reasoning argument to inform a broad prediction of what a reasonable argumentative assumption might be, in this case that a given analogy is representative, using Question 11 from Section 2 of LSAT PrepTest 158. By watching this demonstration that uses free official resources from lawhub.lsac.org, you will learn how to execute a similar style of argument evaluation and assumption prediction using the available interface highlighting tools for future assumption task Logical Reasoning questions on practice or official LSAT exams.
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LSAC LawHub LSAT PrepTest 158 Logical Reasoning Section 2, Question 11:
The chorus in a play, like a narrator in a novel, introduces a point of view not tied to any of the characters, and both chorus and narrator allow the author to comment on the characters' actions and to introduce information about the context in which these actions take place. However, since the information introduced by the chorus in a play is sometimes not consistent with the rest of the information in the play, the chorus in a play is not equivalent to the narrator in a novel.
11. Which one of the following is an assumption on which the argument depends?
A) The narrator in a novel is never deceptive.
B) The voice of a narrator is sometimes necessary in plays that employ a chorus.
C) Information necessary for the audience to understand events in a play is sometimes introduced by the chorus.
D) Information introduced by a narrator in a novel can never be inconsistent with the rest of the information in the novel. (Correct)
E) Authors sometimes use choruses in plays to mislead audiences about events in the plays.
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