- Sun Jun 11, 2017 9:56 pm
#35927
There's really no such thing as "too strong an answer for a Justify question", bli. The goal of a Justify the Conclusion question is to prove the answer is true. If you prove it and go way beyond the minimum proof needed, you've still proven it, right? If I want to prove that my house is the nicest house in Burbank, I could do that by saying it is the only house in Burbank, or even by saying it is the only house on Earth. "Too strong" is not a problem for Justify questions! It is a problem for Assumption questions, of course.
E doesn't justify the conclusion because we don't know whether any lawyer was told. All that answer does is narrow the requirements for violation of the contract, without telling us anything about whether it actually was violated. E isn't a good Assumption answer, either, because the conclusion that the contract was violated does not assume that the contract was violated - it says it! Assumptions are unstated. What was assumed? C, while it is a Justify answer, also works as an Assumption here. Try the Negation Technique - if SOME lawyer was told, then there is no longer any evidence for the claim that the contract was violated. That wrecks the argument and proves that C is an assumption. Some Justify answers will also work as Assumption answers, some won't.
I also think that the author has assumed that Yeung is the only lawyer in the company's legal department. If that was not the case, then there would again be no evidence that no lawyer was told, wrecking the argument. And once again, that same answer would also justify the argument. Neat, huh?
Adam M. Tyson
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