Discussion

The commentator ’s reasoning most closely conforms to which one of the following principles?
(A)Whatever software tools are most advanced and can achieve the goals of academic scholarship are the ones that should alone be used in universities.
(B)...
(C)...
(D)...
(E)...
(F)...
*This question is included in Free Complete Section: LR-B, June '07 LSAT, question #14

The solution is

Posted: 09/06/2012 14:43
Can someone please explain to me why C is the answer. Thank you.
Image Not Available
Contributor
Posted: 09/09/2012 20:16
Hi, Chimmy -

A simplified version of the commentator's argument might be:

"The details of academic research are always publicly available for checking, criticism, and use in other work. Open-source software is made similarly available for similar purposes, while proprietary software is not. Thus open-source software shows a more similar philosophy to that of academic scholarship, and should therefore be used exclusively by universities."

The conclusion follows IF we believe that the similar philosophy of open-source software to that of academic scholarship is a good reason for universities to use it in preference to other software. We should therefore choose the answer that implies this belief, which is 'C'.

( Note that although 'D' may appear to be a valid answer, its claim that such tools are more "efficient" is not reflected in the passage. The commentator's argument is based on an ideal, not on the practical concern of efficiency.)
Posted: 12/21/2012 16:53
Why is the answer not E?
Posted: 12/28/2012 23:23
I still think that E is more correct. C, although not wrong, is merely re-stating the passage, while E is the overall idea/principle the author conveys overall.
Posted: 05/15/2013 06:09
I also agree that E is the most accurate description that deals with principle that the question asks.
Image Not Available
Contributor
Posted: 05/21/2013 14:45
Hi, all -

The passage argues that universities should use open-source software because the open-source model is philosophically similar to that of academic scholarship. There is no suggestion that using other forms of software would "block the goals of academic scholarship," which is why answer E is incorrect.

In fact, unless the academic research involves developing or modifying the software in question (again, neither stated nor hinted by the argument), the principles behind that software's creation are entirely irrelevant to the work that happens to use it as a tool. For example, an academic paper written in Microsoft Word (proprietary) is not significantly different from the same paper written in OpenOffice (open source) from all practical perspectives.

The argument is based solely on a philosophical principle, as reflected in the correct answer, C.

Please post again if you have further questions.

Best,
Lyn

You need to be signed in to perform that action.

Sign In