Commentator: If a political administration is both economically successful and successful at protecting individual li...
lsatstudier1on July 30, 2020
Argument Structure Video
When viewing question #6 about corporations and board members, a general question occurred to me: what is the difference between a principle and generalization? Do you have any tips for identifying and discerning between the two?
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Thanks for the question! So these words are used in somewhat murky ways, and honestly, they’re interchangeable a good amount of the time. I don’t think that an answer on the LSAT would ever hinge on being able to differentiate between whether something was a principle or a generalization. However, I’d say that principles generally have an “ought/should” component to them, or in other words, a prescriptive component. Often, you can think of them as rules. So a principle would be something like: You should eat three meals a day. Because it’s prescribing a course of action, it’s suggesting one state of affairs as somehow better than others. Generalizations, however, are more likely to just be descriptive, or describing things. So something like “politics is messed up.” You’re making a statement about the way things are, not the way things should be. So while they both share the basic idea of something that applies to more than one situation/entity, that often differentiates the two. I say they’re interchangeable because it wouldn’t be wrong to say that “You should eat three meals a day” is a generalization, so there’s definitely some overlap. It’s possible that principles are a subset of generalizations, but I wouldn’t be too surprised if this wasn’t the case.
Hope this helps! Feel free to ask any other questions that you might have.