Free LNAT Mock Test 250 — 9 Questions + Full Answers
Law National Aptitude Test · UK law school applicants · Peak prep: Sep–Oct (UCAS deadline)
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Applaa LNAT Mock Test 250
applaa-lnat-mock-250.pdf · 9 questions
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8 of 9 shownCorrect answers highlighted in green. Full explanations included.
According to the passage, which of the following best represents the primary benefit claimed by the proponents of AI-driven judicial sentencing algorithms?
- A.It would completely eliminate the need for any government oversight in Technology and Law.
- B.It has been universally endorsed by all legal and ethical scholars in Technology and Law.
- C.It will guarantee immediate financial profits for all stakeholders involved.
- D.automated decision systems can process massive volumes of case law faster and more consistently than human judges
✓ Worked Explanation
Core Concept: Identifying the Author's Main Argument (Proponents' Position) LNAT Reading questions often ask you to identify the *primary claim* made by one side of a debate. This tests your ability to distinguish the central argument from peripheral supporting claims, rhetorical phrases, and factually incorrect distractor options. Step-by-Step Resolution: 1. Identify What Proponents Claim: The question asks about the *primary benefit* claimed by *proponents* of AI-driven judicial sentencing al
Which of the following assumptions is necessary for the proponents' argument regarding AI-driven judicial sentencing algorithms to stand?
- A.That traditional methods have never successfully solved any of the problems in this area.
- B.historical sentencing databases contain patterns that are appropriate to replicate in future rulings
- C.That the financial cost of implementing the technology is completely negligible.
- D.That public opinion is always unified on matters of Technology and Law.
✓ Worked Explanation
Core Concept: Identifying Underlying Assumptions An assumption is an unstated premise that *must* be true for an argument to be logically valid. If the assumption is false, the entire argument collapses. LNAT assumption questions are amongst the hardest - they require you to find what the argument silently depends on. Step-by-Step Resolution: 1. Understand the Proponents' Argument: Proponents claim that AI-driven judicial sentencing algorithms delivers the elimination of human bias and greater
Based on the second paragraph, what inference can be drawn regarding the critics' view on the risks of AI-driven judicial sentencing algorithms?
- A.Algorithms risk encoding past discriminatory practices under the guise of statistical objectivity.
- B.Historical sentencing data contains no patterns of racial or economic disparity.
- C.AI systems are physically incapable of processing complex legal briefs.
- D.Judges will be completely replaced by robots within the next five years.
✓ Worked Explanation
Core Concept: Drawing Inferences from Critics' Arguments An inference is a logical conclusion that *follows from* what is stated in the text but is not explicitly written. LNAT inference questions test whether you can reason beyond the surface to what the passage *implies*. Step-by-Step Resolution: 1. Identify the Critics' Core Concern: Paragraph 2 focuses on the critics' objection. They warn specifically about the risk of perpetuating historical prejudices embedded in the training data and vio
According to the passage, which of the following best represents the primary benefit claimed by the proponents of deploying live facial recognition in public street cameras?
- A.It has been universally endorsed by all legal and ethical scholars in Civil Liberties.
- B.law-abiding citizens have no reason to fear public surveillance if it significantly reduces violent crime rates
- C.It will guarantee immediate financial profits for all stakeholders involved.
- D.It would completely eliminate the need for any government oversight in Civil Liberties.
✓ Worked Explanation
Core Concept: Identifying the Author's Main Argument (Proponents' Position) LNAT Reading questions often ask you to identify the *primary claim* made by one side of a debate. This tests your ability to distinguish the central argument from peripheral supporting claims, rhetorical phrases, and factually incorrect distractor options. Step-by-Step Resolution: 1. Identify What Proponents Claim: The question asks about the *primary benefit* claimed by *proponents* of deploying live facial recognitio
Which of the following assumptions is necessary for the proponents' argument regarding deploying live facial recognition in public street cameras to stand?
- A.That traditional methods have never successfully solved any of the problems in this area.
- B.That public opinion is always unified on matters of Civil Liberties.
- C.That the financial cost of implementing the technology is completely negligible.
- D.surveillance systems are highly accurate and free from false-positive demographic biases
✓ Worked Explanation
Core Concept: Identifying Underlying Assumptions An assumption is an unstated premise that *must* be true for an argument to be logically valid. If the assumption is false, the entire argument collapses. LNAT assumption questions are amongst the hardest - they require you to find what the argument silently depends on. Step-by-Step Resolution: 1. Understand the Proponents' Argument: Proponents claim that deploying live facial recognition in public street cameras delivers the rapid identification
Based on the second paragraph, what inference can be drawn regarding the critics' view on the risks of deploying live facial recognition in public street cameras?
- A.Camera footage is automatically deleted after 24 hours in all jurisdictions.
- B.Facial recognition is only capable of identifying people wearing masks.
- C.Mass surveillance represents a fundamental shift in the presumption of innocence in public spaces.
- D.Private security guards have the same legal arrest powers as police officers.
✓ Worked Explanation
Core Concept: Drawing Inferences from Critics' Arguments An inference is a logical conclusion that *follows from* what is stated in the text but is not explicitly written. LNAT inference questions test whether you can reason beyond the surface to what the passage *implies*. Step-by-Step Resolution: 1. Identify the Critics' Core Concern: Paragraph 2 focuses on the critics' objection. They warn specifically about the risk of eroding the right to privacy, chilling public assembly, and creating a s
According to the passage, which of the following best represents the primary benefit claimed by the proponents of AI-driven judicial sentencing algorithms?
- A.It would completely eliminate the need for any government oversight in Technology and Law.
- B.It has been universally endorsed by all legal and ethical scholars in Technology and Law.
- C.It will guarantee immediate financial profits for all stakeholders involved.
- D.automated decision systems can process massive volumes of case law faster and more consistently than human judges
✓ Worked Explanation
Core Concept: Identifying the Author's Main Argument (Proponents' Position) LNAT Reading questions often ask you to identify the *primary claim* made by one side of a debate. This tests your ability to distinguish the central argument from peripheral supporting claims, rhetorical phrases, and factually incorrect distractor options. Step-by-Step Resolution: 1. Identify What Proponents Claim: The question asks about the *primary benefit* claimed by *proponents* of AI-driven judicial sentencing al
Which of the following assumptions is necessary for the proponents' argument regarding AI-driven judicial sentencing algorithms to stand?
- A.historical sentencing databases contain patterns that are appropriate to replicate in future rulings
- B.That public opinion is always unified on matters of Technology and Law.
- C.That traditional methods have never successfully solved any of the problems in this area.
- D.That the financial cost of implementing the technology is completely negligible.
✓ Worked Explanation
Core Concept: Identifying Underlying Assumptions An assumption is an unstated premise that *must* be true for an argument to be logically valid. If the assumption is false, the entire argument collapses. LNAT assumption questions are amongst the hardest - they require you to find what the argument silently depends on. Step-by-Step Resolution: 1. Understand the Proponents' Argument: Proponents claim that AI-driven judicial sentencing algorithms delivers the elimination of human bias and greater
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Each Applaa LNAT mock paper covers Section A: comprehension multiple-choice questions based on reading passages, testing critical thinking and analytical skills — the format used in the real LNAT exam.
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Start LNAT mock tests at least 6–8 weeks before your test date. LNAT peaks in September–October for UCAS early applicants (Oxford, Cambridge, UCL, KCL, Bristol). Applaa's 250 mocks give you full coverage across that window.
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Free PDF — 9 questions with worked answers. Print it or attempt offline.
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Paper Info
- Exam
- LNAT
- Mock number
- 250 of 250
- Questions
- 9
- Format
- Multiple Choice (MCQ)
- Sections
- 1
- Audience
- UK law school applicants
- Timing
- Peak prep: Sep–Oct (UCAS deadline)
- Copyright
- Applaa Proprietary
Sections Covered
- Section A
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