by lsatzen Thu Jun 19, 2014 10:21 pm
This might be redundant, but I had different reasons for eliminating (C) and (E). Hope a different perspective is useful to future LSAT students. MLSAT staff can feel free to ignore this post!
Premise:
(1) Retina scanner stores information about patterns formed by blood vessels
(2) This information allows it to recognize any pattern it has previously scanned
(3) No two eyes have identical patterns of blood vessels in retina
Conclusion:
(1) A retina scanner can be used successfully to determine for any person whether it has ever scanned a retina of that person before.
Real-time thought process:
Author is giving us neat fact about retina scanners. Could be background information or premises, unsure at this point. More features about the retina scanner, this doesn't seem like background information. Okay, previous sentence definitely was not useless background info, keep it in mind. Ah Ha! Author concludes that because of the two features of the retina scanner, it can determine its previous scanees. But wait, what if someone who has been scanned before gets in a gruesome accident and disfigures his / her eye beyond recognition? Move onto answer choices.
Answer Choices:
(A): Here we go, this perfectly addresses the issue that I thought of while reading the stimulus.
(B): Well this just plain contradicts the information given to us in the stimulus. Eliminate.
(C): This seems like a tempting answer choice, because what if there is too much information to be held in the entire system of retina scanner, what if we have to delete some previously stored data to make room for new data? But this concern is irrelevant because the conclusion is not concerned with the entire network of retina scanners, it is focused on a single / particular retina scanner. Further, the conclusion is about those who have been scanned, this answer choice includes those who potentially have not been scanned. Eliminate.
(D): Irrelevant. Concerned with patterns they form.
(E): Incorrect. This requires the additional and unwarranted inference that being cross-referenced within the supposed system of retina scanners causes some sort of interference with the readings.