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Hi guys,
It can be called line of reasoning. It is the structure of each argument and the basis on which an argument is formed.
When people raise an argument, they need to have a conclusion, which is the most important link in reasoning. And it is also the end of the argument most of the time.
Before conclusion, there are premises. A-->B. A is the premise and B is the conclusion.
Sometimes after conclusion, there might be assumptions, which are hidder required conditions. B-->(C), when C is not stated in the argument, C is the assumptions.
All these elements of argument form the line of reasoning. sorting out the elements and relationship will help a lot in CR and RC.
In reading comprehension, the same line of reasoning holds. The only difference is that 1. There are facts that support premises or conclusions. The facts simply padded the argument and make the paragraph much longer. So sort out the links and get down to the basics will help you get the core of the whole article and understand better. 2. There might be more than one conclusions, or hierachy of conclusions. However, follow the reasoning, you will be fine.
I will try to apply the theory in some sample LSAT questions later. Let me know if you have any question. |
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