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1. D
2. C
3. E
4. B
5. C
6. D

Time: 10 minutes 38 seconds

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Anybody can explain Q2?
As passage says (L44-46): However, as the prized bulbs (become more readily available) through reproduction from the
original bulb, their price falls rapidly. So why is C wrong?
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Mavisdu1017
Anybody can explain Q2?
As passage says (L44-46): However, as the prized bulbs (become more readily available) through reproduction from the
original bulb, their price falls rapidly. So why is C wrong?

In the second half of the second paragraph, Garber describes how an initial tulip bulb could command a very high price, drop in value as more bulbs are reproduced from the original, and yet still provide a reasonable return on investment from all the reproduced bulbs now selling at lower cost but in much greater quantities. You need to find an answer choice that displays a similar situation.

The cheap substitute parts do not constitute reproductions of the original parts in the same way that the lower-priced bulbs are reproduced from an original, highly-valued bulb.

Hence (C) is wrong.
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Hi Sajjad1994

Could you please post official explanations for question-2,3 and 6? I didn't find this RC on Powerscore LSAT and other platforms to check my reasoning.

Sajjad1994
Mavisdu1017
Anybody can explain Q2?
As passage says (L44-46): However, as the prized bulbs (become more readily available) through reproduction from the
original bulb, their price falls rapidly. So why is C wrong?

In the second half of the second paragraph, Garber describes how an initial tulip bulb could command a very high price, drop in value as more bulbs are reproduced from the original, and yet still provide a reasonable return on investment from all the reproduced bulbs now selling at lower cost but in much greater quantities. You need to find an answer choice that displays a similar situation.

The cheap substitute parts do not constitute reproductions of the original parts in the same way that the lower-priced bulbs are reproduced from an original, highly-valued bulb.

Hence (C) is wrong.
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Explanation

2. Given Garber’s account of the seventeenth-century Dutch tulip market, which one of the following is most analogous to someone who bought a tulip bulb of a certain variety in that market at a very high price, only to sell a bulb of that variety at a much lower price?

Explanation

This long, involved question stem is pretty straightforward if we take it piece by piece. We are asked to find an answer that treats another commodity the way Garber treated the tulip bulbs. It’s a good thing we paraphrased Garber’s reasoning in the final paragraph. Garber said the new bulbs were priced so high because the buyer will make so much money from the bulbs’ descendants (although the reproduced bulbs themselves will be cheap). So, we just need to evaluate the answers and choose the one that has an original purchased for a high price so that its descendants can be sold more cheaply. That leads us to (D), where the publisher pays a high price for the original so that he can sell lots of cheap copies. We can see this strong analogy provided that we’ve predicted the answer we are looking for before evaluating the answer choices.

(A) This misses the analogy by making no reference to anything that could be considered original or descendant. Nothing in Garber’s tulip bulb analysis implies a withdrawal and reapplication.

(B) Here we have the very same original being resold, not its descendants or copies.

(C) As in (B), what is resold is the original high-priced item, rather than descendants or copies made from that item. The “substitute parts” in this answer choice presumably came from some other source.

(E) In this answer, the problem for the seller is excess space. There is nothing here about buying an original with the intention of selling copies made from it.

Answer: D
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Explanation

3. The passage most strongly supports the inference that Garber would agree with which one of the following statements?

Explanation

In this Inference question, the correct answer will be something that must follow from Garber’s point of view. Fortunately, as strategic readers, we’ve already paraphrased his long argument from Paragraph 3. Garber does not believe that the tulip prices indicated a speculative bubble. He thinks, rather, that the buyers rationally calculated the fundamentals, concluding that they could make money by selling lots of the original bulbs’ descendants. This is exactly what answer (B) says in slightly different words. Paraphrasing is a crucial skill for the strategic reader.

(A) We don’t learn about Garber’s opinion of speculative bubbles in general in the passage, only his take on the 17th-century tulip market.

(C) This answer gets the sufficiency–necessity relationship backwards. Garber would argue that if the prices are rationally based on fundamentals, then there is not a speculative bubble in the market.

(D) This answer goes well beyond the Scope of the passage, which tells us nothing about what Garber thought of the 17th-century investors’ nontulip plays.

(E) This answer distorts Mackay’s account. Mackay claimed that the original high prices were irrational, and that the later low prices showed this. This is what Garber thought was mistaken, not what was stated in choice (E)

Answer: B
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Explanation

6. The phrase “standard pricing pattern” as used in line 38 most nearly means a pricing pattern

Explanation

When the LSAT takes a “vocabulary-in-context” approach in an Inference question, they will invariably pick a word or phrase the meaning of which is dependent on how the author is using it in this particular passage. The test will usually give you a clear referent reading clue (as they do here—line 38), so finding the phrase will be a snap. Where students who miss these questions go wrong is by comparing the answer choices with the phrase in the question stem without researching the context in which the phrase was used in this passage, by this author. When we check the phrase “standard pricing pattern” in line 38, we see that the author is explaining Garber’s criticism of Mackay, in which Garber says that the investors were rationally paying high prices for the original bulbs thinking they could make their money back selling cheap descendants. That’s “standard” stuff for new flower varieties, Garber says; it happens that way over and over. We need an answer that would preserve Garber’s meaning, and that’s (D), which nails the recurring nature of this pattern.

(A) There’s no sense from the context that Garber would think that any other commodities’ patterns would be measured against this one that recurs for new flower varieties. He might, but we cannot determine that from what we read in lines following this phrase in the passage.

(B) This answer is tricky. It may be that investors act this way whenever a new flower variety comes out, but there is no sense in the passage that the pattern is dependent on a meeting of the minds for its validity.

(C) The notion that the term is used to mean that the pricing pattern reaches some minimal level distorts its use in the passage beyond recognition.

(E) Nothing in the paragraph indicates that either Garber or the author thinks the new flower pricing pattern stands as an example or illustration of anything.

Answer: D
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