I've already listed the 10 Hardest Logic Games, but a list of the 5 Hardest Reading Comprehension Passages is long overdue.
This list is focused on exams published 2000-2010. (See the list of every LSAT PrepTest.)
These make for great bathroom/beach reading. Enjoy!
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1. PrepTest 35 (October 2001), Passage 4 - Ronald Dworkin and Legal Positivism vs. Moralism (p234 in Next 10)
2. PrepTest 49 (June 2006), Passage 4 - Maize
3. PrepTest 50 (October 2006), Passage 4 - Riddled Basins of Attraction
4. PrepTest 55 (October 2008), Passage 3 - Maxine Kingston and the Chinese talk-story
5. PrepTest 59 (December 2009), Passage 3 - Isamu Noguchi and Sculpture
Also, here are some Difficult LSAT Logical Reasoning Questions.
Photo by dalvenjah
This list is focused on exams published 2000-2010. (See the list of every LSAT PrepTest.)
These make for great bathroom/beach reading. Enjoy!
***
1. PrepTest 35 (October 2001), Passage 4 - Ronald Dworkin and Legal Positivism vs. Moralism (p234 in Next 10)
2. PrepTest 49 (June 2006), Passage 4 - Maize
3. PrepTest 50 (October 2006), Passage 4 - Riddled Basins of Attraction
4. PrepTest 55 (October 2008), Passage 3 - Maxine Kingston and the Chinese talk-story
5. PrepTest 59 (December 2009), Passage 3 - Isamu Noguchi and Sculpture
Also, here are some Difficult LSAT Logical Reasoning Questions.
Photo by dalvenjah
I have been following your schedule and I just took prep test 55. What the hell is the difference between "scholarly appreciation for its longstanding tradition" and "clear respect for the diversity of its ancient sources." It was the only answer I missed and I am a little miffed by the inanely subtle distinction...if any.
ReplyDeleteI would think of it as a difference between personal and professional ('scholarly' and 'clear respect'. Note also that 'clear' is a strong word, so if there is even one concession or drawback that the author admits, then 'clear' might be a wrong choice. 'Scholarly' appreciation would, to me, seem like a professional appreciation, but one that is not necessarily as strong of an opinion. Main point, "clear respect" seems like a stronger (and personal, in contrast to "scholarly" being professional) opinion than "scholarly" is.
DeleteOof. I was about to ask, "What about Aida Walker, or Cohesion and Groupthink" until I looked back and realized that, on their own, they aren't too scary. Put them together and I get my milk money stolen.
ReplyDeleteI know you wrote this years ago. But I just got dominated by that RC section. Seriously painful. Glad to know that it wasn't just me though.
DeleteSame ... wow .. what a brutal RC section
DeleteI just had my world shattered by this RC section... Aida Walker and Cohesion Groupthink... actually wanted to curl up and cry...
DeleteSame here.. ;(
DeleteDrew, the crucial phrase that you (tellingly) transfer incorrectly is "artistic sophistication," not "tradition." The phrase it most directly refers to is "already ancient and capable of producing masterpieces." Masterpieces must be artistically sophisticated. On the other hand, though the author has respect for the ancient sources, no where does it say that these sources are diverse. In fact, it was a single heritage that was "transplanted" into a new culture. As often with the LSAT, the distinction hinges on a single word.
ReplyDeleteugh, just did PT 45. Got all the questions right about the Hippocratic oath right, but three wrong on the stupid Canadian aboriginee passage!
ReplyDeleteI'll trade you. Hippocratic oath beat me to the floor and stole my pocket change. I had trouble distinguishing between the author arguing to preserve the key intent of the oath, and the author arguing that the oath needed changes that allowed the key intent to still remain intact. As it turns out, that that misunderstanding cost me three missed questions :/
DeleteCohesion-Groupthink (preptest #54) ate me alive. missed 5 of 8. It is the toughest I have seen on any test so far.
ReplyDeleteSimilar to the commenter from June 16th, I aced the Hippocratic Oath and bombed (also 3 wrong) the Canadian First Nations passage - and I'm a Canadian who studied indigenous rights issues! Sigh. Guess I got complacent.
ReplyDeleteI would say no list of hardest passages is complete with mention of "code switching" from PT 43
ReplyDeleteYup Aboriginal Rights passage killed me. Not too bad on Hippocratic.
ReplyDeleteWhat about preptest 48, the passage about Gluck! The questions were extremely tricky and difficult even though the passage itself was easy to get through.
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ReplyDeleteChinese Comprehension