法学院入学考试(LSAT)逻辑推理模拟试题3
来源:优易学  2011-10-9 9:58:48   【优易学:中国教育考试门户网】   资料下载   外语书店

  TEST 2

  SECTION II

  Time 35 minutes 24 Questions

  Directions: The questions in this section are based on the reasoning contained in brief statements or passages.

  1. Some people believe that witnessing violence in movies will discharge aggressive energy. Does watching someone else eat fill one’s own stomach?

  In which one of the following does the reasoning most closely parallel that employed in the passage?

  (A) Some people think appropriating supplies at work for their own personal use is morally wrong. Isn’t shoplifting morally wrong?

  (B) Some people think nationalism is defensible. Hasn’t nationalism been the excuse for committing abominable crimes?

  (C) Some people think that boxing is fixed just because wrestling usually is. Are the two sports managed by the same sort of people?

  (D) Some people think that economists can control inflation. Can meteorologists make the sun shine?(D)

  (E) Some people think workaholics are compensating for a lack of interpersonal skills. However, aren’t most doctors workaholics?

  2. Ann: All the campers at Camp Winnehatchee go to Tri-Cities High School

  Bill: That’s not true. Some Tri-Cities students are campers at Camp Lakemont.

  Bill’s answer can be best explained on the assumption that he has interpreted Ann’s remark to mean that

  (A) most of the campers at Camp Lakemont come from high schools other than Tri-Cities

  (B) most Tri-Cities High School students are campers at Camp Winnehatchee

  (C) some Tri-Cities High School students have withdrawn from Camp Lakemont

  (D) all Tri-Cities High School students have withdrawn from Camp Lakemont(E)

  (E) only campers at Camp Winnehatchee are students at Tri-Cities High School

  3. More than a year ago, the city announced that police would crack down on illegally parked cars and that resources would be diverted from writing speeding tickets to ticketing illegally parked cars. But no crackdown has taken place. The police chief claims that resources have had to be diverted from writing speeding tickets to combating the city’s staggering drug problem. Yet the police are still writing as many speeding tickets as ever. Therefore, the excuse about resources being tied up in fighting drug-related crime simply is not true.

  The conclusion in the passage depends on the assumption that

  (A) every member of the police force is qualified to work on combating the city’s drug problem

  (B) drug-related crime is not as serious a problem for the city as the police chief claims it is

  (C) writing speeding tickets should be as important a priority for the city as combating drug-related crime

  (D) the police could be cracking down on illegally parked cars and combating the drug problem without having to reduce writing speeding tickets(E)

  (E) the police cannot continue writing as many speeding tickets as ever while diverting resources to combating drug-related crime

  4. Dried grass clippings mixed into garden soil gradually decompose, providing nutrients for beneficial soil bacteria. This results in better-than-average plant growth. Yet mixing fresh grass clippings into garden soil usually causes poorer-than-average plant growth.

  Which one of the following, if true, most helps to explain the difference in plant growth described above?

  (A) The number of beneficial soil bacteria increases whenever any kind of plant material is mixed into garden soil.

  (B) Nutrients released by dried grass clippings are immediately available to beneficial soil bacteria.

  (C) Some dried grass clippings retain nutrients originally derived from commercial lawn fertilizers, and thus provide additional enrichment to the soil.

  (D) Fresh grass clippings mixed into soil decompose rapidly, generating high levels of heat that kill beneficial soil bacteria.(D)

  (E) When a mix of fresh and dried grass clippings is mixed into garden soil, plant growth often decreases.

  5. A gas tax of one cent per gallon would raise one billion dollars per year at current consumption rates. Since a tax of fifty cents per gallon would therefore raise fifty billion dollars per year, it seems a perfect way to deal with the federal budget deficit. This tax would have the additional advantage that the resulting drop in the demand for gasoline would be ecologically sound and would keep our country from being too dependent on foreign oil producers.

  Which one of the following most clearly identifies an error in the author’s reasoning?

  (A) The author cites irrelevant data.

  (B) The author relies on incorrect current consumption figures.

  (C) The author makes incompatible assumptions.

  (D) The author mistakes an effect for a cause.(C)

  (E) The author appeals to conscience rather than reason.

  6. As symbols of the freedom of the wilderness, bald eagles have the unique capacity to inspire people and foster in them a sympathetic attitude toward the needs of other threatened species. Clearly, without that sympathy and the political will it engenders, the needs of more obscure species will go unmet. The conservation needs of many obscure species can only be met by beginning with the conservation of this symbolic species, the bald eagle.

  Which one of the following is the main point of the passage as a whole?

  (A) Because bald eagles symbolize freedom, conservation efforts should be concentrated on them rather than on other, more obscure species.

  (B) The conservation of bald eagles is the first necessary step in conserving other endangered species.

  (C) Without increased public sympathy for conservation, the needs of many symbolic species will go unmet.

  (D) People’s love of the wilderness can be used to engender political support for conservation efforts.(B)

  (E) Other threatened species do not inspire people or foster sympathy as much as do bald eagles.

  13. If retail stores experience a decrease in revenues during this holiday season, then either attitudes toward extravagant gift-giving have changed or prices have risen beyond the level most people can afford. If attitudes have changed, then we all have something to celebrate this season. If prices have risen beyond the level most people can afford, then it must be that salaries have not kept pace with rising prices during the past year.

  Assume the premises above to be true. If salaries have kept pace with rising prices during the past year, which one of the following must be true?

  (A) Attitudes toward extravagant gift-giving have changed.

  (B) Retail stores will not experience a decrease in retail sales during this holiday season.

  (C) Prices in retail stores have not risen beyond the level that most people can afford during this holiday season.

  (D) Attitudes toward extravagant gift-giving have not changed, and stores will not experience a decrease in revenues during this holiday season.(C)

  (E) Either attitudes toward extravagant gift-giving have changed or prices have risen beyond the level that most people can afford during this holiday season.

  14. The “suicide wave” that followed the United States stock market crash of October 1929 is more legend than fact. Careful examination of the monthly figures on the causes of death in 1929 shows that the number of suicides in October and in November was comparatively low. In only three other months were the monthly figures lower. During the summer months, when the stock market was flourishing, the number of suicides was substantially higher.

  Which one of the following, if true, would best challenge the conclusion of the passage?

  (A) The suicide rate is influenced by many psychological, interpersonal, and societal factors during any given historical period.

  (B) October and November have almost always had relatively high suicide rates, even during the 1920s and 1930s.

  (C) The suicide rate in October and November of 1929 was considerably higher than the average for those months during several preceding and following years.

  (D) During the years surrounding the stock market crash, suicide rates were typically lower at the beginning of any calendar year than toward the end of that year.(C)

  (E) Because of seasonal differences, the number of suicides in October and November of 1929 would not be expected to be the same as those for other months.

  15. A well-known sports figure found that combining publicity tours with playing tours led to problems, so she stopped combining the two. She no longer allows bookstore appearances and playing in competition to occur in the same city within the same trip. This week she is traveling to London to play in a major competition, so during her stay in London she will not be making any publicity appearances at any bookstore in London.

  Which one of the following most closely parallels the reasoning used in the passage?

  (A) Wherever there is an Acme Bugkiller, many wasps are killed. The Z family garden has an Acme Bugkiller, so any wasps remaining in the garden will soon be killed.

  (B) The only times that the hospital’s emergency room staff attends to relatively less serious emergencies are times when there is no critical emergency to attend to. On Monday night the emergency room staff attended to a series of fairly minor emergencies, so there must not have been any critical emergencies to take care of at the time.

  (C) Tomato plants require hot summers to thrive. Farms in the cool summers of country Y probably do not have thriving tomato plants.

  (D) Higher grades lead to better job opportunities, and studying leads to higher grades. Therefore, studying will lead to better job opportunities.(B)

  (E) Butter knives are not sharp. Q was not murdered with a sharp blade, so suspect X’s butter knife may have been the murder weapon.

  Questions 16-17

  The advanced technology of ski boots and bindings has brought a dramatic drop in the incidence of injuries that occur on the slopes of ski resorts: from 9 injuries per 1,000 skiers in 1950 to 3 in 1980. As a result, the remainder of ski-related injuries, which includes all injuries occurring on the premises of a ski resort but not on the slopes, rose from 10 percent of all ski-related injuries in 1950 to 25 percent in 1980. The incidence of these injuries, including accidents such as falling down steps, increases with the amount of alcohol consumed per skier.

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