LSAT Reading : Making Inferences in Social Science Passages

Study concepts, example questions & explanations for LSAT Reading

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Example Questions

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Example Question #11 :Must Be True In Social Science Passages

"Team Sports" (2016)

Sports may seem to rule the world. The World Cup for association football, better known as soccer in North America and simply football in Britain, is the most watched event across the globe every four years. The Super Bowl, the championship for American football’s National Football League, has become a topic of conversation internationally, despite the localized reach of its parent league. The Indian Premier League tapped into a cricket mad population of over one billion, giving India a new national obsession in the twenty-first century.

Despite their ubiquity in our modern society, organized team sports are largely the invention of, to borrow from Sir Winston Churchill’s history writing, English speaking peoples during the nineteenth century. This is not to say that certain kinds of large scale games were never played, but they were seen primarily as children’s diversions. When played by adults, they took an informal, chaotic nature. “Football” often merely described a game played on foot rather than horseback, and it often had a simple target of one group of men attempting to get a ball past a parish or county boundary, with their opposition able to stop them anyway they saw fit. Cricket, the game of the upper classes that could play on days other than Sunday, was early developed compared to other sports, but it only had set numbers of players and regular length of games beginning in the mid-eighteenth century.

The nineteenth century saw a positive flood of rules for what were previously considered ways to keep kids amused during an afternoon. In New York, a men’s society calling themselves the Knickerbocker Club set down a firm set of rules for baseball, so that they could play it among themselves and against other teams. At England’s Cambridge University in 1848, a large group of students put together their different forms of football to create a more universal set of rules. The Melbourne Football Club from Victoria, Australia officially set down their own rules for their particular form of football in 1859, giving rise to the game now known as “Australian football.” The late nineteenth century saw the holdouts against the original Cambridge rules develop Rugby football on the principle that the ball should be handled occasionally, which would be modified into Rugby Union in the south of England, Rugby League in the north of England, and American and Canadian football in North America.

This obsession with rules might seem like a particularly Victorian pastime, making sure everything had its place and never allowing anything to get out of order. Yet it was also borne out of the fact that railroads meant that what used to be county pastimes could now be played at a national and even international level and newspapers allowed the stories of far away games to be transmitted almost instantaneously. The extra component that made organized team sports come into being would appear to be the will of the British and their former and current colonies to exert control and authority over every element of life.

根据提供的信息通道,which of the following statements must be true?

Possible Answers:

Organized team sports were much slower to be accepted among the working classes than the more well educated

Football games from before the nineteenth century were not played by many people and were not large scale events

The people who wrote out the rules for team sports were largely people who were not interested in playing the sports

Rugby union, Rugby league, Australian rules football, Canadian football, and American football all share certain commonalities in their gameplay

Athletes are unable to switch between sports such as Canadian football and American football due to their significant differences

Correct answer:

Rugby union, Rugby league, Australian rules football, Canadian football, and American football all share certain commonalities in their gameplay

Explanation:

The author directly notes that Rugby union, Rugby league, Australian rules football, Canadian football, and American football came from the same initial game. Such a common ancestry would show that all of these sports have certain similarities in their gameplay which should be noticeable to outside observers.

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