Daily Drills 7 - Section 7 - Question 1
In taking the position outlined, the author presupposes which one of the following?
Replies
Mehran June 6, 2017
@cadespivey these drills are asking you to identify the question type based on the question stem, so you will not see the actual stimulus here.Given that the question type establishes the criteria for the correct answer, it is very important that you are able to identify these different question types.
You can find instructions on each of the five daily drills here:
https://testmaxprep.com/lsat/blog/free-daily-lsat-prep-drills-by-lsatmax
Hope that helps! Please let us know if you have any other questions.
jeb267 November 23, 2017
These drills are so ridiculous. You'd think based on the fact on most of them people are confused, you'd realize there is something wrong. Also, the explanations are just as difficult to decipher.
Mehran November 23, 2017
Sorry that you feel that way but these drills couldn't be more straightforward.They are also extremely important skills that you should master as you prepare for the LSAT.
Don't get discouraged! Keep at it!
Let us know if you have any other questions.
rmhern1 April 28, 2018
I don't see the position, I have have no information to answer the questionsclovermac32 August 2, 2018
yo chill, you'll catch on eventually.arctan1 August 15, 2018
^^^ hahaha true.Referring to the drill question, I don't understand why this isn't a Strengthen w/ Sufficient Premise question. Since, the question stem uses the term "presupposes," i.e. S - >N.
The definition of presupposes:
pre·sup·pose (v)
3rd person present: presupposes (of an action, process, or argument)
(1) require as a precondition of possibility or coherence.
assume.
(2) tacitly assume at the beginning of a line of argument or course of action that something is the case.
"His relationships did not permit the degree of self-revelation that true intimacy presupposes."
"This presupposes the existence of a policy-making group."
"Your argument presupposes that it does not matter who is in power."
synonyms: require, necessitate, imply, entail, mean, involve, presume, assume, take it for granted, take it as read, suppose, surmise, think, accept, consider.
arctan1 August 15, 2018
Is it always the case that presupposes will be used to mean "necessitate" rather than "assume" ?