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LSAT Logic Applied

Podcast by Andrew Leahey

English

Technology & science

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About LSAT Logic Applied

“LSAT Logic Applied” breaks down everyday arguments in news, politics, and ads using the tools of LSAT logical reasoning. Learn to spot flawed assumptions, strengthen arguments, and think like a law student—without "prepping" for the test. Quick, clear, and a little nerdy.

All episodes

28 episodes

episode Life’s Ingredients Are Not Life: The Logic of Detecting Alien Biology artwork

Life’s Ingredients Are Not Life: The Logic of Detecting Alien Biology

Can scientists detect life without knowing what alien life looks like? A new article [https://scienceblogs.com/sb-admin/2025/12/12/can-scientists-detect-life-without-knowing-what-it-looks-151468] about NASA’s Bennu asteroid sample and a machine-learning framework called LifeTracer raises exactly that question. Material from the asteroid Bennu contained many of life’s chemical building blocks, including nucleobases, amino acids, and complex organic molecules. But that does not mean scientists found life. In this episode of LSAT Logic Applied, I use core LSAT concepts like necessary and sufficient conditions, false positives, causation, analogy, and assumption testing to unpack the difference between chemistry that is consistent with life and chemistry that proves life. The episode also looks at LifeTracer, a new approach that classifies full chemical patterns rather than searching for one decisive biosignature. That move may help scientists avoid Earth-centered assumptions—but it also raises a classic LSAT question: how much can a model trained on known Earth biology and meteorite chemistry tell us about unknown samples from Mars, Europa, Enceladus, or beyond? This episode is about astrobiology, but the logic applies everywhere: evidence can be relevant without being conclusive. Life’s ingredients may be necessary for life, but they are not sufficient to prove life existed.

8 May 2026 - 13 min
episode Is Everyone Really Dehydrated? The Logic Behind Gatorade’s Big Claim artwork

Is Everyone Really Dehydrated? The Logic Behind Gatorade’s Big Claim

A new press release [https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/150-million-americans-feel-dehydrated-gatorade-aims-to-change-how-people-think-about-hydration-302743912.html] from Gatorade claims that over 150 million Americans feel dehydrated—and positions its products as a science-backed solution that can hydrate “better, faster, or longer than water.” That sounds compelling. But what exactly is being claimed? In this episode of LSAT Logic Applied, I break down the argument using core LSAT concepts like equivocation, necessary assumptions, problem-solution framing, and vague appeals to authority. When does “feeling dehydrated” actually mean dehydration? What does “better than water” mean without context? And is hydration really confusing—or just being framed that way? This episode explores how definitions, framing, and selective use of science can turn an ordinary condition into a large-scale problem with a convenient solution. If you’re interested in applying LSAT-style reasoning to marketing, health claims, and everyday arguments, this one’s for you.

23 Apr 2026 - 6 min
episode Linked to Death? The Logic Behind an IBS Drug Study artwork

Linked to Death? The Logic Behind an IBS Drug Study

A new large-scale study [https://www.nature.com/articles/s43856-026-01498-6] found that some medications used by patients with irritable bowel syndrome—especially antidepressants, and in IBS-D patients loperamide and diphenoxylate—were associated with higher all-cause mortality, while other IBS treatments were not. That is a serious finding. But what exactly does it prove? In this episode of LSAT Logic Applied, I break down the study using classic LSAT concepts like causation versus correlation, confounding by indication, scope, statistical framing, and overreading cautious conclusions. The central lesson is simple but important: a strong association can justify concern without yet proving that the medication itself caused the outcome. This is a good example of how scientific headlines can be both grounded and easy to overread. When does “linked to” become “caused by?” What would strengthen that inference, and what would weaken it? And how should we think about large observational studies that are careful, sophisticated, and still not the same thing as proof? If you like applying LSAT-style reasoning to medicine, research, and public discourse, this episode is for you.

20 Apr 2026 - 8 min
episode Millionaire, But Not Rich? The Logic of Relative Wealth artwork

Millionaire, But Not Rich? The Logic of Relative Wealth

A Washington Post story [https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2026/04/13/more-american-millionaires-than-ever/] reports that more Americans are millionaires than ever before—but many of them still do not feel rich. That sounds intuitive in an economy shaped by inflation, soaring housing costs, and retirement wealth that exists mostly on paper rather than in cash. But what exactly follows from that? In this episode of LSAT Logic Applied, I break down the argument using classic LSAT concepts like equivocation, alternative explanations, statistical framing, and scope shift. The key question is not whether $1 million means less than it once did. It does. The harder question is whether that means millionaire status no longer signals wealth—or whether the argument quietly changes the meaning of “rich” along the way. This is a great case study in how real-world arguments often hinge not on disputed facts, but on slippery categories. When does “not as rich as before” become “not rich at all”? And how do we tell the difference between feeling middle-class and actually being middle-class? If you like applying LSAT-style reasoning to economics, policy, and public discourse, this episode is for you.

16 Apr 2026 - 8 min
episode A Cash Crisis—or a False Necessity? USPS Under the LSAT Lens artwork

A Cash Crisis—or a False Necessity? USPS Under the LSAT Lens

The U.S. Postal Service says it may run out of cash within a year—and is suspending pension contributions to free up $2.5 billion. The logic seems straightforward: there’s a problem, this action helps solve it, so it must be justified. But does that conclusion actually follow? In this episode of LSAT Logic Applied, we break down the argument using core LSAT concepts like necessary vs. sufficient conditions, alternative explanations, and scope shifts. While the USPS identifies a real financial constraint and a measure that alleviates it, the reasoning may go a step too far—treating one workable solution as if it were the only viable option. Along the way, we explore key logical questions: * When does a solution become a necessity? * How do we spot ignored alternatives in policy arguments? * And what assumptions are required to justify a major financial decision? This isn’t just about the Postal Service—it’s about how easily “this helps” turns into “this must be done.” If you want to sharpen your ability to analyze real-world arguments with LSAT precision, this episode is a perfect case study.

13 Apr 2026 - 6 min
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