- Sat Sep 20, 2014 11:00 pm
#35178
Complete Question Explanation
Main Point. The correct answer choice is (E)
This stimulus begins with an example of the “some people say…” rhetorical device, in which the
author opens with some other person’s view and then immediately argues against it. Here, the
politician starts with the view held by “some proponents of unilateral nuclear arms reduction”
that the unilateral reduction of a country’s nuclear arsenal would pave the way to an international
agreement on arms reduction by encouraging other countries to also reduce their own nuclear
arsenals. The politician disagrees with this view, concluding that unilateral nuclear arms reduction
would be dangerous. In support of this view, the politician says that it does not consider countries
that are about to enter into civil wars, many of which have nuclear capability, and which cannot be
trusted to abide by an international arms reduction agreement.
This is a Main Point question. Our prephrase is that the correct answer choice will contain a
restatement of the politician’s conclusion, that reducing the country’s nuclear arsenal unilaterally
would be dangerous.
Answer choice (A): The politician did reference the problem of nations on the verge of civil war, but
that statement was a premise offered in support of the conclusion, not the conclusion itself.
Answer choice (B): This answer choice restates the view of unilateral nuclear arms reduction
proponents, with which the politician disagrees.
Answer choice (C): While this seems to be a rational real-world consideration, the politician did not
raise it.
Answer choice (D): It appears that the politician would agree with this sentiment. However, this
concern did not appear in the stimulus.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice, because it restates the politician’s
conclusion, as described above.
Main Point. The correct answer choice is (E)
This stimulus begins with an example of the “some people say…” rhetorical device, in which the
author opens with some other person’s view and then immediately argues against it. Here, the
politician starts with the view held by “some proponents of unilateral nuclear arms reduction”
that the unilateral reduction of a country’s nuclear arsenal would pave the way to an international
agreement on arms reduction by encouraging other countries to also reduce their own nuclear
arsenals. The politician disagrees with this view, concluding that unilateral nuclear arms reduction
would be dangerous. In support of this view, the politician says that it does not consider countries
that are about to enter into civil wars, many of which have nuclear capability, and which cannot be
trusted to abide by an international arms reduction agreement.
This is a Main Point question. Our prephrase is that the correct answer choice will contain a
restatement of the politician’s conclusion, that reducing the country’s nuclear arsenal unilaterally
would be dangerous.
Answer choice (A): The politician did reference the problem of nations on the verge of civil war, but
that statement was a premise offered in support of the conclusion, not the conclusion itself.
Answer choice (B): This answer choice restates the view of unilateral nuclear arms reduction
proponents, with which the politician disagrees.
Answer choice (C): While this seems to be a rational real-world consideration, the politician did not
raise it.
Answer choice (D): It appears that the politician would agree with this sentiment. However, this
concern did not appear in the stimulus.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice, because it restates the politician’s
conclusion, as described above.