Logical Reasoning Argument Structure: Finding What’s Being Argued (and How)

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Last updated 3:01 PM on 3/28/26
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29 Terms

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Argument

A set of statements where premises support a conclusion.

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Premises

Statements offered as support for the conclusion in an argument.

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Conclusion

The main claim that the premises support, representing the author's overall takeaway.

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Main Point

The author's primary conclusion or assertion in an argument.

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Support

Reasons or evidence provided by premises that bolster the conclusion.

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Explanation

Clarification of why something is true, not aimed at proving a specific conclusion.

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Intermediate Conclusion

A conclusion that is supported by premises and used to further support a final conclusion.

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Structural Clues

Words indicating roles in argument such as 'therefore' for conclusions and 'because' for premises.

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Common Conclusion Indicators

Words like 'therefore', 'thus', and 'so' that signal a conclusion.

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Common Premise Indicators

Words such as 'because', 'since', and 'given that' that indicate supporting evidence.

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Misidentify Conclusion

A mistake that leads to confusion over support and objection in an argument.

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Point at Issue

A specific claim that represents the disagreement between two speakers.

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Sharing Commitments

What each speaker believes must be true for their statements to hold.

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Courtroom Analogy

Imagining speakers' arguments as conflicting sides in a trial, focusing on what each affirms or denies.

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Point of Agreement

A claim that both speakers accept, even if they disagree on other points.

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Concession

Acknowledgment of a point that is accepted by both speakers, often showing common ground.

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Principle Questions

Questions that ask you to connect a general rule or guideline to a specific argument.

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Normative Principle

A principle that conveys what one 'should' do, framing moral or policy standards.

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Justifying Principle

A principle that, if assumed, makes an argument valid.

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Supporting Principle

A principle that strengthens an argument but does not guarantee the conclusion.

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Principle that Conforms

A principle that describes the reasoning used in the argument.

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Abstract Reasoning

Taking the specific details of an argument and summarizing them in broader terms.

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Common Mistakes in LSAT Logic

Errors such as picking answers based on topic rather than logical structure or misinterpreting disagreement.

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Weakening Argument

Identifying statements that challenge the reasoning or support for a conclusion.

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Strengthening Argument

Finding statements that support or reinforce the relationship between premises and conclusion.

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Identify Misleading Support

Recognizing when a fact might be true but does not serve as a primary support for the argument.

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Absolute Language

Words like 'always' or 'never' that indicate rigidity and may misrepresent nuanced positions.

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Conditional Statement

An if-then statement often used in arguments to establish a requirement or consequence.

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Weak vs Strong Argument

Differentiating between arguments that may seem valid but lack sufficient backing or rationale.