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Critical Reasoning

The document contains 3 passages from the LSAT exam with multiple choice questions about each passage. 1) The first passage is about a debate between Mr. Janeck and Ms. Siuzdak over whether a businessman with no political experience could be elected governor. One of the answer choices implies Ms. Siuzdak believes business experience is valuable preparation for running a state government. 2) The second passage discusses arguments for and against a flat tax system. One answer choice states that the current tax system benefits high-income taxpayers more than low-income taxpayers through deductions and loopholes. 3) The third passage proposes a national identity card system to curb illegal immigration. A concerned reader would want clar

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
228 views

Critical Reasoning

The document contains 3 passages from the LSAT exam with multiple choice questions about each passage. 1) The first passage is about a debate between Mr. Janeck and Ms. Siuzdak over whether a businessman with no political experience could be elected governor. One of the answer choices implies Ms. Siuzdak believes business experience is valuable preparation for running a state government. 2) The second passage discusses arguments for and against a flat tax system. One answer choice states that the current tax system benefits high-income taxpayers more than low-income taxpayers through deductions and loopholes. 3) The third passage proposes a national identity card system to curb illegal immigration. A concerned reader would want clar

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TEST A

1. Mr. Janeck: I don’t believe Stevenson will win the election for governor. Few voters are
willing to elect a businessman with no political experience to such a responsible public
office.
Ms. Siuzdak: You’re wrong. The experience of running a major corporation is a valuable
preparation for the task of running a state government.
M. Siuzdak’s response shows that she has interpreted Mr. Janeck’s remark to imply which of
the following?
(A) Mr. Janeck considers Stevenson unqualified for the office of governor.
(B) No candidate without political experience has ever been elected governor of a state.
(C) Mr. Janeck believes that political leadership and business leadership are closely
analogous.
(D) A career spent in the pursuit of profit can be an impediment to one’s ability to run a state
government fairly.
(E) Voters generally overestimate the value of political experience when selecting a
candidate.
2. Which of the following best completes the passage below?
One tax-reform proposal that has gained increasing support in recent years is the flat tax,
which would impose a uniform tax rate on incomes at every level. Opponents of the flat tax
say that a progressive tax system, which levies a higher rate of taxes on higher-income
taxpayers, is fairer, placing the greater burden on those better able to bear it. However, the
present crazy quilt of tax deductions, exemptions, credits, and loopholes benefits primarily
the high-income taxpayer, who is consequently able to reduce his or her effective tax rate,
often to a level below that paid by the lower-income taxpayer. Therefore, ______
(A) higher-income taxpayers are likely to lend their support to the flat-tax proposal now
being considered by Congress
(B) a flat-tax system that allowed no deductions or exemptions would substantially increase
actual government revenues
(C) the lower-income taxpayer might well be penalized by the institution of a flat-tax system
in this country
(D) the progressive nature of our present tax system is more illusory than real
(E) the flat tax would actually be fairer to the lower-income taxpayer than any progressive
tax system could be
3. As part of our program to halt the influx of illegal immigrants, the administration is
proposing the creation of a national identity card. The card would be available only to U.S.
citizens and to registered aliens, and all persons would be required to produce the card
before they could be given a job. Of course, such a system holds the potential, however
slight, for the abuse of civil liberties. Therefore, all personal information gathered through
this system would be held strictly confidential, to be released only by authorized personnel
under appropriate circumstances. Those who are in compliance with U.S. laws would have
nothing to fear from the identity card system.
In evaluating the above proposal, a person concerned about the misuse of confidential
information would be most interested in having the author clarify the meaning of which of
the following phrases?
(A) “all persons” (line 5)
(B) “however slight” (line 7)
(C) “civil liberties” (line 8)
(D) “appropriate circumstances” (line 11)
(E) “U.S. laws” (line 2)
5. Johnson is on firm ground when he asserts that the early editors of Dickinson’s poetry often
distorted her intentions. Yet Johnson’s own, more faithful, text is still guilty of its own forms
of distortion. To standardize Dickinson’s often indecipherable handwritten punctuation by
the use of the dash is to render permanent a casual mode of poetic phrasing that Dickinson
surely never expected to see in print. It implies that Dickinson chose the dash as her typical
mark of punctuation when, in fact, she apparently never made any definitive choice at all.
Which of the following best summarizes the author’s main point?
(A) Although Johnson is right in criticizing Dickinson’s early editors for their distortion of
her work, his own text is guilty of equally serious distortions.
(B) Johnson’s use of the dash in his text of Dickinson’s poetry misleads readers about the
poet’s intentions.
(C) Because Dickinson never expected her poetry to be published, virtually any attempt at
editing it must run counter to her intentions.
(D) Although Johnson’s attempt to produce a more faithful text of Dickinson’s poetry is
well-meaning, his study of the material lacks sufficient thoroughness.
(E) Dickinson’s editors, including Johnson, have failed to deal adequately with the problem
of deciphering Dickinson’s handwritten manuscripts.
8. Dear Applicant:
Thank you for your application. Unfortunately, we are unable to offer you a position in our
local government office for the summer. As you know, funding for summer jobs is limited,
and it is impossible for us to offer jobs to all those who want them. Consequently, we are
forced to reject many highly qualified applicants.
Which of the following can be inferred from the letter?
(A) The number of applicants for summer jobs in the government office exceeded the
number of summer jobs available.
(B) The applicant who received the letter was considered highly qualified.
(C) Very little funding was available for summer jobs in the government office.
(D) The application of the person who received the letter was considered carefully before
being rejected.
(E) Most of those who applied for summer jobs were considered qualified for the available
positions.
Questions 10-11 are based on the following
As one who has always believed that truth is our nation’s surest weapon in the propaganda war
against our foes, I am distressed by reports of “disinformation” campaigns by American
intelligence agents in Western Europe. In a disinformation campaign, untruths are disseminated
through gullible local journalists in order to damage the interests of our enemies and protect our
own. Those who defend this practice say that lying is necessary to counter Soviet disinformation
campaigns aimed at damaging America’s political interests. These apologists contend that one
must fight fire with fire. I would point out to the apologists that the fire department finds water
more effective.
10. The author of the passage above bases his conclusion on which of the following?
(A) A circular definition of “disinformation”
(B) An example of the ineffectiveness of lying as a weapon in the propaganda war
(C) An analogy between truth and water
(D) An appeal to the authority of the fire department
(E) An attack on the character of American intelligence agents in Western Europe
11. The author’s main point is that
(A) although disinformation campaigns may be effective, they are unacceptable on ethical
grounds
(B) America’s moral standing in the world depends on its adherence to the truth
(C) the temporary political gains produced by disinformation campaigns generally give way
to long-term losses
(D) Soviet disinformation campaigns have done little to damage America’s standing in
Europe
(E) disinformation campaigns do not effectively serve the political interests of the United
States
12. Are you still reading the other newspaper in town? Did you know that the Daily Bugle is
owned by an out-of-town business syndicate that couldn’t care less about the people of
Gotham City? Read the Daily Clarion, the only real voice of the people of Gotham City!
Which of the following most directly refutes the argument raised in the advertisement
above?
(A) Over half of the advertising revenues of the Daily Clarion come from firms whose
headquarters are located outside of Gotham City.
(B) The Daily Clarion usually devotes more of its pages to out-of-town news than does the
Daily Bugle.
(C) Nearly 40 percent of the readers of the Daily Clarion reside outside the limits of Gotham
City.
(D) The editor-in-chief and all the other members of the editorial staff of the Daily Bugle
have lived and worked in Gotham City for ten years or more.
(E) The Daily Bugle has been published in Gotham City for a longer time than has the Daily
Clarion.
Questions 13-14 are based on the following.
The earth’s resources are being depleted much too fast. To correct this, the United States must
keep its resource consumption at present levels for many years to come.
13. The argument above depends on which of the following assumptions?
(A) Per capita resource consumption in the United States is at an all-time high.
(B) The United States wastes resources.
(C) The United States uses more resources than any other country.
(D) The United States imports most of the resources it uses.
(E) Curbing U.S. resource consumption will significantly retard world resource depletion.
14. Which of the following, if true, would most strengthen the argument above?
(A) New resource deposits are constantly being discovered.
(B) The United States consumes one-third of all resources used in the world.
(C) Other countries need economic development more than the United States does.
(D) Other countries have agreed to hold their resource consumption at present levels.
(E) The United States has been conserving resources for several years.
15. Alba: I don’t intend to vote for Senator Frank in the next election. She is not a strong
supporter of the war against crime.
Tam: But Senator Frank sponsored the latest anticrime law passed by the Senate.
Alba: If Senator Frank sponsored it, it can’t be a very strong anticrime law.
Which of the following identifies the most serious logical flaw in Alba’s reasoning?
(A) The facts she presents do not support her conclusion that Senator Frank is soft on crime.
(B) She assumes without proof that crime is the most important issue in the upcoming
election.
(C) She argues in a circle, using an unsupported assertion to dismiss conflicting evidence.
(D) She attacks Senator Frank on personal grounds rather than on he merit as a political
leader.
(E) In deciding not to vote for Senator Frank, she fails to consider issues other than crime.
17. With Proposition 13, if you bought your house 11 years ago for $75,000, your property tax
would be approximately $914 a year (1 percent of $75,000 increased by 2 percent each year
for 11 years); and if your neighbor bought an identical house next door to you for $200,000
this year, his tax would be $2,000 (1 percent of $200,000). Without Proposition 13, both you
and your neighbor would pay $6,000 a year in property taxes (3 percent of $200,000).
Which of the following is the conclusion for which the author most likely is arguing in the
passage above?
(A) Proposition 13 is unconstitutional because it imposes an unequal tax on properties of
equal value.
(B) If Proposition 13 is repealed, every homeowner is likely to experience a substantial
increase in property taxes.
(C) By preventing inflation from driving up property values, Proposition 13 has saved
homeowners thousands of dollars in property taxes.
(D) If Proposition 13 is not repealed, identical properties will continue to be taxed at
different rates.
(E) Proposition 13 has benefited some homeowners more than others.
Questions 18-19 are based on the following.
At an enormous research cost, a leading chemical company has developed a manufacturing
process for converting wood fibers into a plastic. According to the company, this new plastic can
be used for, among other things, the hulls of small sailboats. But what does the company think
sailboat hulls used to be made of? Surely the mania for high technology can scarcely go further
than this.
18. The author’s opinion of the manufacturing process described in the passage is based
primarily on the fact that
(A) plastic is unlikely to be durable enough for high-quality sailboat hulls
(B) the research costs of developing the process outweigh any savings possible from the use
of the plastic
(C) a small sailboat is not normally regarded as a high-tech product
(D) hulls for small sailboats can be made from wood without converting it into plastic
(E) many other spheres of human activity are in far greater need of technological research
19. Which of the following, if true, would most seriously weaken the author’s conclusion?
(A) The plastic produced by the process is considerably lighter, stronger, and more
watertight than wood.
(B) The wood used in producing the plastic is itself in increasingly short supply.
(C) The cost of the manufacturing process of the plastic increases the cost of producing a
sailboat hull by 10 to 15 percent.
(D) Much of the cost of the research that developed the new process will be written off for
tax purposes by the chemical company.
(E) The development of the new plastic is expected to help make the chemical company an
important supplier of boat-building materials.

TEST B

19. The U.S. census is not perfect: thousands of Americans probably go uncounted.
However, the basic statistical portrait of the nation painted by the census is accurate.
Certainly some of the poor go uncounted, particularly the homeless; but some of the rich go
uncounted as well, because they are often abroad or traveling between one residence and
another.
Which of the following is an assumption on which the argument above depends?
Both the rich and the poor have personal and economic reasons to avoid being counted by the
census.
All Americans may reasonably be classified as either poor or rich.
The percentage of poor Americans uncounted by the census is close to the percentage of rich
Americans uncounted.
The number of homeless Americans is approximately equal to the number of rich Americans.
The primary purpose of the census is to analyze the economic status of the American
population.
8. Current farm policy is institutionalized penalization of consumers. It increases food
prices for middle- and low-income families and costs the taxpayer billions of dollars a year.
Which of the following statements, if true, would provide support for the author’s claims
above?
Farm subsidies amount to roughly $20 billion a year in federal payouts and $12 billion more
in higher food prices.
According to a study by the Department of Agriculture, each $1 of benefits provided to
farmers for ethanol production costs consumers and taxpayers $4.
The average full-time farmers have an average net worth of over $300,000.
I only
II only
III only
I and II only
I, II, and III
15. In the effort to fire a Civil Service employee, his or her manager may have to spend
up to $100,000 of tax money. Since Civil Service employees know how hard it is to fire
them, they tend to loaf. This explains in large part why the government is so inefficient.
It can be properly inferred on the basis of the statements above that the author believes which
of the following?
Too much job security can have a negative influence on workers.
More government workers should be fired.
Most government workers are Civil Service employees.
I only
I and III only
II only
I, II, and III
III only
17. Ronald: According to my analysis of the national economy, housing prices should not
increase during the next six months unless interest rates drop significantly.
Mark: I disagree. One year ago, when interest rates last fell significantly, housing prices did
not increase at all.
It can be inferred from the conversation above that Mark has interpreted Ronald’s statement
to mean that
housing prices will rise only if interest rates fall
if interest rates fall, housing prices must rise
interest rates and housing prices tend to rise and fall together
interest rates are the only significant economic factor affecting housing prices
interest rates are likely to fall significantly in the next six months
Below is an excerpt from a letter that was sent by the chairman of a corporation to the
stockholders.
A number of charges have been raised against me, some serious, some trivial. Individuals
seeking to control the corporation for their own purposes have demanded my resignation.
Remember that no court of law in any state has found me guilty of any criminal offense
whatsoever. In the American tradition, as you know, an individual is considered innocent
until proven guilty. Furthermore, as the corporation’s unbroken six-year record of growth
will show, my conduct of my official duties as chairman has only helped enhance the success
of the corporation, and so benefited every stockholder.
Which of the following can be properly inferred from the excerpt?
The chairman believes that all those who have demanded his resignation are motivated by
desire to control the corporation for their own purposes.
Any misdeeds that the chairman may have committed were motivated by his desire to
enhance the success of the corporation.
The chairman is innocent of any criminal offense.
The corporation has expanded steadily over the past six years.
Any legal proceedings against the chairman have resulted in his acquittal.
In the years since the city of London imposed strict air-pollution regulations on local
industry, the number of bird species seen in and around London has increased dramatically.
Similar air-pollution rules should be imposed in other major cities.
Each of the following is an assumption made in the argument above EXCEPT:
In most major cities, air-pollution problems are caused almost entirely by local industry.
Air-pollution regulations on industry have a significant impact on the quality of the air.
The air-pollution problems of other major cities are basically similar to those once suffered
by London.
An increase in the number of bird species in and around a city is desirable.
The increased sightings of bird species in and around London reflect an actual increase in the
number of species in the area.

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