Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Easy

PT150 S4 P2 Q11 Explanation

Inferential Thoughts

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

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Passage

Common sense suggests that we know our own thoughts directly, but that we infer the thoughts of other people. The former process is noninferential and infallible, while the latter is based on others’ behavior and can always be wrong. But this assumption is challenged by experiments in psychology demonstrating that in certain are wrong to think of ourselves as having noninferential and infallible access to our own thoughts.

Recognizing an obligation to explain why we cling so tenaciously to an illusory belief in noninferential and infallible knowledge of our own thoughts, these psychologists suggest that this illusion is analogous to what happens to us when we become experts in a particular area. Greater expertise appears to change not only our in our identification of what we ourselves think because we believe we are perceiving it directly.

In claiming that we have only inferential access to our thoughts, the psychologists come perilously close to claiming that we base our inferences about what we ourselves are thinking solely on observations of our own external behavior. But, in fact, their arguments do not commit them to this claim; the psychologists suggest that contradicts our own. Thus, they are crucial in creating the illusion of noninferentiality and infallibility.

What this question is testing

Analogy

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
11.

Which one of the following is most closely analogous to the explanation in the passage of how persons fail to notice that they are

Answer choices

  1. Correct84% picked this

    An anthropologist cannot describe his own culture accurately because he has become too familiar with its workings and

    Why this is right

    This provides us our best available match. CAUSE EFFECT so expert in making we fail to notice inferences about X we're doing X too familiar with Y can't describe X and therefore takes accurately Y for granted This language doesn't all line up perfectly, but there's an overall similarity of "you know yourself so well that you don't realize certain things about yourself (like that you're making inferences about your thinking)" just like "you know your country's culture so well that you don't realize certain things about it".

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

  2. Bad Cause Match5% picked this

    Science is limited with regard to studying the human mind because science necessarily depends

    It's hard to match up either half of this. CAUSE EFFECT so expert in making we fail to notice inferences about X we're doing X X depends on X is limited when human reasoning it comes to humans We could say that we're limited in our ability to notice we're making inferences about our own thinking, but it's not because that process depends on human reasoning. After all, making inferences about other people's behavior is something we do notice ourselves doing, even though that also relies on human reasoning.

  3. Bad Cause / Effect Match6% picked this

    As they develop, children become increasingly comfortable with formal abstraction and therefore become vulnerable to failures to

    It's hard to match up either half of this. CAUSE EFFECT so expert in making we fail to notice inferences about X we're doing X become increasingly harder to learn comfortable with Y from not-Y stuff

  4. Bad Cause / Effect Match4% picked this

    Judges are barred from trying cases involving their family members because of a potential

    It's hard to match up either half of this. CAUSE EFFECT so expert in making we fail to notice inferences about X we're doing X potential conflict barred from of interest being involved

  5. Bad Cause / Effect Match1% picked this

    A ship's commander must delegate certain duties and decisions to other officers on her ship because she is too busy to attend

    It's hard to match up either half of this. CAUSE EFFECT so expert in making we fail to notice inferences about X we're doing X too busy to have to delegate deal with X X to others

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