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Re: To the editor: In 1960, an astronomer proposed a mathematical model [#permalink]
SajjadAhmad

Sorry but the passage needs to make it clear who is Clay Moltz? Is the editor to whom the letter is written? Is it the astronomer himself? Or Is it the person writing to the Editor?

I hope our question is reasonable.

CC Bunuel GMATNinja
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Re: To the editor: In 1960, an astronomer proposed a mathematical model [#permalink]
TheNightKing wrote:
SajjadAhmad

Sorry but the passage needs to make it clear who is Clay Moltz? Is the editor to whom the letter is written? Is it the astronomer himself? Or Is it the person writing to the Editor?

I hope our question is reasonable.

CC Bunuel GMATNinja


The question says that "Which one of the following, if accepted by Clay Moltz, would require HIM to reconsider HIS CONCLUSION? This means that Clay Moltz is the person who brings about THE CONCLUSION in the argument. As the argument goes, THE CONCLUSION of the argument is "This indicates that the astronomer's model is wrong, and life as we know it exists only on the planet Earth." Hence, our task is to find the answer choice that, if accepted by Clay Moltz, would weaken his conclusion above.
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Re: To the editor: In 1960, an astronomer proposed a mathematical model [#permalink]
analytica233 wrote:

The question says that "Which one of the following, if accepted by Clay Moltz, would require HIM to reconsider HIS CONCLUSION? This means that Clay Moltz is the person who brings about THE CONCLUSION in the argument. As the argument goes, THE CONCLUSION of the argument is "This indicates that the astronomer's model is wrong, and life as we know it exists only on the planet Earth." Hence, our task is to find the answer choice that, if accepted by Clay Moltz, would weaken his conclusion above.


analytica233

I see what you are saying here and that definitely makes sense.

May be I was thrown off by the name and the fact that I have not seen this kind of question before? And add to it the fact that question is on the higher difficulty side.

I will revisit the question in some time.

Thanks!
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Re: To the editor: In 1960, an astronomer proposed a mathematical model [#permalink]
TheNightKing wrote:
analytica233 wrote:

The question says that "Which one of the following, if accepted by Clay Moltz, would require HIM to reconsider HIS CONCLUSION? This means that Clay Moltz is the person who brings about THE CONCLUSION in the argument. As the argument goes, THE CONCLUSION of the argument is "This indicates that the astronomer's model is wrong, and life as we know it exists only on the planet Earth." Hence, our task is to find the answer choice that, if accepted by Clay Moltz, would weaken his conclusion above.


analytica233

I see what you are saying here and that definitely makes sense.

May be I was thrown off by the name and the fact that I have not seen this kind of question before? And add to it the fact that question is on the higher difficulty side.

I will revisit the question in some time.

Thanks!


You're welcome, man. Do not let the difficulty label make you anxious. Just keep studying and sharpening your established way of CR reasoning, and one day everything just "clicks" and makes sense.
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Re: To the editor: In 1960, an astronomer proposed a mathematical model [#permalink]
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Noticed that the question, as it is posted right now, has some spelling mistakes and doesn't mention who Clay Moltz is. This is how the question appears in the official LSAT:

To the Editor:

In 1960, an astronomer proposed a mathematical model for determining whether extraterrestrial life exists. It was based on the assumptions that life as we know it could exist only on a planet and that many stars are, like our Sun, orbited by planets. On the basis that there are nine planets in our solar system and one of them has life as we know it, the astronomer predicted that there are as many as one million extraterrestrial civilizations across all solar systems. Yet astronomers to date have not detected even one planet outside our solar system. This indicates that the astronomer's model is wrong, and life as we know it exists only on the planet Earth.

- Clay Moltz

Which one of the following, if accepted by Clay Moltz, would require him to reconsider his conclusion?

(A) Forms of life other than life as we know it exist on other planets.
(B) There are many stars that are not orbited by planets.
(C) Detecting planets outside our solar system requires more sophisticated instruments than are currently available.
(D) The soundness of the conclusion reached by applying a mathematical model depends on the soundness of the assumptions on which the model is based.
(E) Due to sheer distances and expanses of space involved, any extraterrestrial civilization would have great difficulty communicating with ours.

I request Sajjad1994 or Bunuel to please make the corrections.
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Re: To the editor: In 1960, an astronomer proposed a mathematical model [#permalink]
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Expert Reply
Cav wrote:
Noticed that the question, as it is posted right now, has some spelling mistakes and doesn't mention who Clay Moltz is. This is how the question appears in the official LSAT:

To the Editor:

In 1960, an astronomer proposed a mathematical model for determining whether extraterrestrial life exists. It was based on the assumptions that life as we know it could exist only on a planet and that many stars are, like our Sun, orbited by planets. On the basis that there are nine planets in our solar system and one of them has life as we know it, the astronomer predicted that there are as many as one million extraterrestrial civilizations across all solar systems. Yet astronomers to date have not detected even one planet outside our solar system. This indicates that the astronomer's model is wrong, and life as we know it exists only on the planet Earth.

- Clay Moltz

Which one of the following, if accepted by Clay Moltz, would require him to reconsider his conclusion?

(A) Forms of life other than life as we know it exist on other planets.
(B) There are many stars that are not orbited by planets.
(C) Detecting planets outside our solar system requires more sophisticated instruments than are currently available.
(D) The soundness of the conclusion reached by applying a mathematical model depends on the soundness of the assumptions on which the model is based.
(E) Due to sheer distances and expanses of space involved, any extraterrestrial civilization would have great difficulty communicating with ours.

I request Sajjad1994 or Bunuel to please make the corrections.


__________________________
Fixed the issues. Thank you!
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Re: To the editor: In 1960, an astronomer proposed a mathematical model [#permalink]
To the editor: In 1960, an astronomer proposed a mathematical model for determining whether extraterrestrial life exists. It was based on the assumptions that life as we know it could exist only on a planet and that many stars are, like our Sun, orbited by planets. On the basis that there are nine planets in our solar system and one of them has life as we know it, the astronomer predicted that there are as many as one million extraterrestrial civilizations across all solar systems. Yet astronomers to date have not detected even one planet outside our solar system. This indicates that the astronomer's model is wrong, and life as we know it exists only on the planet Earth.
- Clay Moltz

Which one of the following, if accepted by Clay Moltz, would require him to reconsider his conclusion?

(A) Forms of life other than life as we know it exist on other planets. - WRONG. Irrelevant as it's out of scope.
(B) There are many stars that are not orbited by planets. - WRONG. Again loses focus of the passage.
(C) Detecting planets outside our solar system requires more sophisticated instruments than are currently available. - CORRECT. If true than there is a possibility that planets are there where life form as we know it exists.
(D) The soundness of the conclusion reached by applying a mathematical model depends on the soundness of the assumptions on which the model is based. - WRONG. Whatever the model be it is not CM's concern.
(E) Due to sheer distances and expanses of space involved, any extraterrestrial civilization would have great difficulty communicating with ours. - WRONG. It is use who are looking not ET civilization.

First of all, for me this is totally a new way a question stem is presented.
Basically, it is asking what might be an assumption(sort of, though not exactly) that the passage ignored. OR which of the options impacts the passage to not conclude as concluded. Only C does that.

Answer C.
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Re: To the editor: In 1960, an astronomer proposed a mathematical model [#permalink]
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