Thanks Guru for your reply! I used to bookmark all your replies for any LSAT question I felt difficult to understand -- all of them were made of plain words in straightforward way with illustrative examples and of course with great sense of humor I appreciate so much. But I am sorry your explanation to this question could be an exception.
For the conclusion of the passage, I guess we both agree that either condition A or condition B can cause the situation C in existence.
Condition A: too difficult to domesticate wild mammals
Condition B: not worth in domesticating those mammals
Situation C: still most wild mammals today are not domesticated.
In a simple form, A or B --> C
If we weaken the answer choice B, it only negates the condition A while has condition B open for any possibility. Namely, we may still have a situation like
NOT A& B--> C: it means that negation of B can still be compatible with the conclusion. So such a negation won't help too much to wreck the conclusion as we expect.
On the other side with respect to answer choice A, I reject your negation with respect: the negation of "domesticate each wild mammal species" means "
NOT every wild mammals have been domesticated" rather than "ONE wild large mammal that wasn't domesticated". Since not every wild mammal species have been tried of being domesticated, it is a strong reason to deny the validity of "MOST" wild mammals not worth being or too difficult to be domesticated as claimed in the conclusion of the passage --
since you did not try every possibility simply because of "seemed not worth", how can you tell most of those non-tried are actually not worth?! ohthatpatrick Wrote:Just remember that Necessary Assumption is simply the task of
Which answer, when negated, most weakens the argument?
Negating (A)
"there is at least one wild large mammal that humans never tried to domesticate"
Not much punch. ONE wild large mammal that wasn't domesticated?
Negating (B)
It is MUCH EASIER today to domesticate wild large mammals.
Way more weakening effect.