Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Medium

PT134 S4 P3 Q18 Explanation

Evolutionary Psychology

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

TopicsMeaning in ContextScience

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Passage

Passage A Evolutionary psychology has taught us to examine human behavior from the standpoint of the theory of evolution—to explain a given type of human behavior by examining how it contributes to the reproductive success of individuals exhibiting the behavior, and thereby to the proliferation of the genetic material responsible for causing an individual expends energy or other valuable resources promoting the welfare of another individual?

The answer probably lies in the psychological experiences of identification and empathy. Such experiences could have initially arisen in response to cues (like physical resemblance) that indicated the presence of shared genetic material in human ancestors. The psychological states provoked by these cues could have increased the chances of related individuals’ receiving child; genes promoting their own self-propagation may thus operate through instinctive actions that appear unselfish.

Since human ancestors lived in small, kin-based groups, the application of altruistic mechanisms to the entire group would have promoted the propagation of the genes responsible for those mechanisms. Later, these mechanisms may have come to apply to humans who are not kin when mechanisms may have arisen within a genetically “selfish” system.

Passage B Evolutionary psychology is a kind of conspiracy theory; that is, it explains behavior by imputing an interest (the proliferation of genes) that the agent of the behavior does not openly acknowledge, or indeed, is not even aware of. Thus, what seemed to be out to be your genes’ conspiracy to propagate themselves.

Such arguments can appear persuasive on the face of it. According to some evolutionary psychologists, an interest in the proliferation of genes explains monogamous families in animals whose offspring mature slowly. Human offspring mature slowly; and, at least in numerical terms, our species favors monogamous families. Evolutionary psychologists take of our interest in propagating our genes. Are they right?

Maybe yes, maybe no; this kind of inference needs to be handled with great care. There are, most often, all sorts of interests that would explain any given behavior. What is needed to make it decisive that a particular interest explains a particular behavior is that the behavior would be reasonable only after all; there must be some things that one cares for just for their own sakes.

What this question is testing

Meaning in Context

Your task

Pin down exactly what the question asks about the passage — a detail, the author's view, the structure, or the main point — before looking at the choices.

Common trap

Answers that restate a true detail from the passage but don't answer the specific question being asked.

Winning move

Anticipate the answer in your own words from the passage, then find the choice that matches that prediction.

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

The question
18.

Which one of the following assertions from passage A most clearly exemplifies what the author of passage B means in calling evolutionary psychology a “conspiracy theory”

Answer choices

  1. Not About Genes11% picked this

    Evolutionary psychologists seek to examine human behavior from the point of view of the

    Indirectly, what this sentence is talking about ultimately leads to evolutionary psychologists saying things like, "your genes 'trick' you into caring about your kids in order to safeguard the copies of those genes that exist inside your kids". But this sentence itself is not the best match for "your genes trick you into caring about your kids, in order to protect the copies of those genes that exist inside your kids".

  2. Not About Genes5% picked this

    Altruism presents a difficult problem for

    This doesn't sound anything like, "your genes 'trick' you into caring about your kids in order to safeguard the copies of those genes that exist inside your kids".

  3. Not About Genes5% picked this

    An altruistic individual uses valuable resources to promote the well-being of

    This doesn't sound anything like, "your genes 'trick' you into caring about your kids in order to safeguard the copies of those genes that exist inside your kids".

  4. Correct79% picked this

    Genes may promote their self-propagation through actions that

    Why this is right

    This is our best match for, "your genes 'trick' you into caring about your kids in order to safeguard the copies of those genes that exist inside your kids". The genes are promoting their self-propagation (safeguarding the copies of genes that exist inside the kids) through actions that appear unselfish (making you care about your kids).

    Skill tested: Meaning in Context · how this choice captures the passage's function is the move to repeat next time.

  5. Not About Genes0% picked this

    Early humans lived in small, kin-based

    This doesn't sound anything like, "your genes 'trick' you into caring about your kids in order to safeguard the copies of those genes that exist inside your kids".

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