Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Hard

PT138 S1 P3 Q16 Explanation

The Invisible Hand

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

TopicsAuthor's AttitudeSociety

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Passage

David Warsh’s book describes a great contradiction inherent in economic theory since 1776, when Adam Smith published The Wealth of Nations. Warsh calls it the and the Invisible Hand.

Using the example of a pin factory, Smith emphasized the huge increases in efficiency that could be achieved through increased size. The pin factory’s employees, by specializing on narrow tasks, produce far more than they could if each worked independently. Also, Smith was the first to recognize how a market economy can to please people but because doing so enables them to make money in a competitive marketplace.

These two concepts, however, are opposed to each other. The parable of the pin factory says that there are increasing returns to scale—the bigger the pin factory, the more specialized its workers can be, and therefore the more pins the factory can produce per worker. But increasing returns create a natural tendency always get it right depends on the assumption that returns to scale are diminishing, not increasing.

For almost two centuries, the assumption of diminishing returns dominated economic theory, with the Pin Factory de-emphasized. Why? As Warsh explains, it wasn’t about ideology; it was about following the line of least mathematical resistance. Economics has always had scientific aspirations; economists have always sought the rigor and clarity that comes from formalism, while those of increasing returns—the Pin Factory—are notoriously hard to represent mathematically.

Many economists tried repeatedly to bring the Pin Factory into the mainstream of economic thought to reflect the fact that increasing returns obviously characterized many enterprises, such as railroads. Yet they repeatedly failed because they could not state their ideas rigorously enough. Only since the late 1970s has this “underground river”—a term ways to describe the Pin Factory with the rigor needed to make it respectable.

What this question is testing

Author's Attitude

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
16.

The author’s attitude towards the idea that the Pin Factory model should be part of the mainstream of economic thought could most accurately be

Answer choices

  1. Opposite6% picked this

    The author isn't hostile towards the idea of Pin Factory being part of mainstream economic thinking. She's supportive of it.

  2. Opposite13% picked this

    The author isn't uncertain towards the idea of Pin Factory being part of mainstream economic thinking. She's convinced of it: "Increasing returns obviously characterizes many enterprises".

  3. Too Weak7% picked this

    The author isn't merely curious about Pin Factory being part of mainstream economic thinking. She's supportive of it. This is too neutral / agnostic to capture the fact that our author seems to think Pin Factory is overdue for being in the mainstream of economic thought.

  4. Too Neutral9% picked this

    The author isn't indifferent about Pin Factory being part of mainstream economic thinking. She asked "Why was it suppressed for 200 years?!" because she thinks it should be part of mainstream thinking. She says that "increasing returns obviously characterized many enterprises."

  5. Correct65% picked this

    Why this is right

    The author says in that first sentence of the last paragraph that "increasing returns (i.e. Pin Factory) obviously characterize many enterprises", so why? was Pin Factory wrongly de-emphasized for two centuries?

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

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