News

More than 75 percent of LSAT logical reasoning questions will contain an argument. For purposes of the LSAT, an argument is a conclusion supported by premises. In questions involving arguments ...
Take arguments about climate change, for example, when sceptics quote someone like a theoretical physicist as an expert – despite the fact that theoretical physics generally has very little to ...
By contrast, arguments with true or plausible premises, that support a conclusion either deductively or through strong inductive inference, are more convincing examples of evidence-based ...
Alternative facts and sloppy thinking. Either one can hijack our efforts to learn the truth and make quality decisions. How can we analyze purported facts and arguments critically and correctly ...
This first installment will discuss how to understand arguments in the logical reasoning section. In questions involving arguments, you will often see the LSAT refer to the "argument" or the ...