summary
the essence of tackling inference questions on the lsat involves analyzing the given information to deduce a conclusion that is as qualified as the premises provided, avoiding extremes due to the often conditional nature of the information.
- inference questions require proving one of the answer choices true based on the given information.
- the information provided typically includes conditional statements and avoids absolutes, guiding towards similarly qualified conclusions.
- extreme answer choices are to be avoided as they likely go beyond the scope of the provided information.
- the correct answer will closely align with the qualifications and conditions set by the facts in the question.
- analyzing each answer choice methodically to match the information's scope is crucial for selecting the correct inference.
chapters
00:00
understanding inference questions
00:18
analyzing the facts
01:14
evaluating answer choices
02:09
identifying the correct answer