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We all know the common LSAT Logical Reasoning question types: necessary assumptions, flaws, strengthen, weaken, causation, scope shifts. But here’s the better question: Why should anyone care about those forms of inquiry outside a standardized test? In this episode of LSAT Logic Applied, Andrew Leahey steps back from breaking down a single news story and instead explains why the LSAT’s core question types mirror the structure of real-world argument. Every tax proposal rests on hidden assumptions. Every policy debate turns on causation claims. Every sweeping reform risks a scope shift. Every confident headline can be weakened—or strengthened—by new evidence. The LSAT doesn’t just test logic under time pressure. It trains intellectual discipline: • What must be true for this claim to hold? • Where does the reasoning break? • What evidence would actually change my mind? • Does the conclusion match the strength of the evidence? In a world saturated with confident assertions and thin premises, those questions matter. This episode isn’t about beating the test. It’s about learning how arguments actually work—and how they fall apart. Subscribe for more short episodes applying clean logic to messy real-world claims.