Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Medium

PT111 S2 P3 Q19 Explanation

Biology and Universal Laws

A free, expert breakdown of this official LSAT Reading Comprehension question.

TopicsNon-Author OpinionScience

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Passage

Philosophers of science have long been uneasy with biology, preferring instead to focus on physics. At the heart of this preference is a mistrust of uncertainty. Science is supposed to be the study of what is true everywhere and for all times, and the phenomena of science are supposed to be repeatable, interested in how elephants and mice got to be such different sizes in the first place.

Philosophers of science have not been alone in claiming that science must consist of universal laws. Some evolutionary biologists have also acceded to the general intellectual disdain for the merely particular and tried to emulate physicists, constructing their science as a set of universal laws. In formulating the notion of a universal life, and they have raised the possibility that historical contingency is an integral factor in biology.

To illustrate the difference between biologists favoring universal, deterministic laws of evolutionary development and those leaving room for historical contingency, consider two favorite statements of philosophers (both of which appear, at first sight, to be universal assertions): “All planets move in ellipses” and “All swans are white.” The former is truly universal necessary consequence of the laws governing the motion of objects in a gravitational field.

Biological determinists would say that “All swans are white” is universal in the same way, since, if all swans were white, it would be because the laws of natural selection make it impossible for swans to be otherwise: natural selection favors those characteristics that increase the average rate of offspring production, and of evolutionary theory has been the history of the struggle between these two views of swans.

What this question is testing

Non-Author Opinion

Topic

The author is comparing how philosophers think about physics vs. biology — and explaining why physics has been the favorite.

Framework

Present Debate. The author shows you the preference, traces it, and then surfaces the recent biology-side pushback.

Main Point

The simpler version: philosophers of science love physics because physics deals in big, universal "this happens everywhere, always" laws. Biology is messier — it has history baked into it. Some biologists tried to make their field look more like physics, but lately others have started saying,

P1: The preference, explained

Philosophers want science to be about universal, repeatable stuff. So they're fascinated by physics laws (everything falls at the same rate) but bored by biology questions (why are mice and elephants different sizes?). They distrust history.

P2: Two kinds of biologists

One kind tried to copy physics — looking for biology's "law of gravity" (a universal struggle for existence, constant DNA evolution rate). The other kind, more recently, asks whether biology really runs on universal laws or whether contingency is part of the deal.

P3: A real universal law

"All planets move in ellipses" really is universal. It applies to planets that don't even exist yet — the laws of gravity force the shape.

Reading along? Open the full official question in LawHub — we show a fragment here and keep the reasoning in our own words.

The question
19.

It can be inferred from the passage that determinist biologists have tried to emulate physicists because these

Answer choices

  1. Unsupported Comparison1% picked this

    the methods of physicists are more easily understood

    The distinction we're looking for is that "the methods of physicists are better at deriving universal laws", not that they are "more easily understood".

  2. Unsupported Comparison4% picked this

    physicists have been accorded more respect by their fellow scientists than

    The distinction we're looking for is that "physicists are better at deriving universal laws", not that they are "more respected by their scientific peers".

  3. Correct77% picked this

    biology can only be considered a true science if universal laws can be constructed to

    Why this is right

    This can be derived from the beginning of the 2nd paragraph. These determinist biologists are claiming / believing, just as the philosophers of science did, that science must consist of universal laws. So an implication of that is "biology can only be a true science if it consists of universal laws".

    Skill tested: Non-Author Opinion · how this choice captures the passage's function is the move to repeat next time.

  4. Out of Scope: applying planetary laws16% picked this

    the specific laws that have helped to explain the behavior of planets can be applied

    We have no textual support for this very specific (and implausible) idea that the laws that explain the behavior of planets (presumably Newtonian physics) can be applied to biological phenomena. We're going to explain an amoeba's asexual reproduction using Newton's gravitational laws?! This answer is just trying to trap people via the metaphor about "finding their own version of the law of gravity". That doesn't mean "applying the law of gravity to biological phenomena". That means, "finding some law of biology that is as useful and universal to biology as the law of gravity is to the world of physics".

  5. Too Strong: all1% picked this

    all scientific endeavors benefit from intellectual exchange between various

    This is an extreme and unsupported claim. We know that the determinist biologists desire universal laws. That's why they're emulating physicists. Nothing in the text said that they were emulating physicists because they think that all science benefits from interdisciplinary exchanges.

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