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Zaxby’s says fans are craving the return of its Southern Fried Shrimp and Giant Quesadillas—so bringing them back is a no-brainer. But what, exactly, does that claim depend on?
In this episode of LSAT Logic Applied, we use a real corporate press release from Zaxbys to break down a classic LSAT skill: identifying a necessary assumption—the unstated idea an argument must rely on to work at all.
No politics, no policy. Just clean logic, marketing language, and the hidden reasoning that holds the argument together.
If you’ve ever wondered how confident claims get their persuasive force, this episode shows you where to look.
By Andrew LeaheyZaxby’s says fans are craving the return of its Southern Fried Shrimp and Giant Quesadillas—so bringing them back is a no-brainer. But what, exactly, does that claim depend on?
In this episode of LSAT Logic Applied, we use a real corporate press release from Zaxbys to break down a classic LSAT skill: identifying a necessary assumption—the unstated idea an argument must rely on to work at all.
No politics, no policy. Just clean logic, marketing language, and the hidden reasoning that holds the argument together.
If you’ve ever wondered how confident claims get their persuasive force, this episode shows you where to look.