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june 2007, passage 2, question 14



summary
the content provides an in-depth analysis of how to approach comparative questions on the lsat, specifically focusing on identifying the relationship between two passages.
  • comparative questions require understanding the relationship between two passages, often asking where did music come from.
  • passages may use different kinds of evidence to answer the same question but arrive at divergent conclusions.
  • identifying the correct relationship involves dismissing incorrect answer choices through logical reasoning and understanding of the passages' content.
  • the correct answer choice for comparative questions will accurately reflect the nature of evidence and conclusions drawn by each passage.
  • the lsat does not require making judgment calls on subjective matters like an author's commitment to their hypothesis.
chapters
00:00
understanding comparative questions
00:31
analyzing evidence and conclusions
00:58
selecting the correct answer
01:34
eliminating incorrect answers