- Wed Nov 06, 2019 5:59 pm
#71764
Hi t_m6289,
When you think about something that is a necessary assumption. you are looking for what absolutely is required for the argument to work. Our conclusion here is that the practice of predatory pricing SHOULD be acceptable. In order to do that, you need an assumption that shows that specific practice is ok. Your proposed answer that "some predatory pricing practices are acceptable" is very different than saying that THIS practice is acceptable. Saying some practices are ok is not enough to say this one is.
Defending that a particular practice is acceptable requires a fairly strong answer choice. Sometimes people shy away from strong answer choices, but that's not always a great technique. You need to know what sort of question you have, and what that question requires you to do. Answer choice (E) would be a terrible choice if it was asing what must be true---the language is too strong. But when asking what we need in order to draw the conclusion? The language is perfect.
The argument basically holds that since the threat of competition will keep prices from getting unreasonable, predatory pricing is acceptable. Our answer choice (E) states that any pricing practice that does not result in unreasonable prices should be acceptable. Without that answer choice, we wouldn't be able to say that the predatory practices should be acceptable. We need to link the fact that the practices do not result in unreasonable prices with the fact that they should be acceptable. Without strong language linking those two ideas, we cannot support the conclusion.
Hope that helps,
Rachael
When you think about something that is a necessary assumption. you are looking for what absolutely is required for the argument to work. Our conclusion here is that the practice of predatory pricing SHOULD be acceptable. In order to do that, you need an assumption that shows that specific practice is ok. Your proposed answer that "some predatory pricing practices are acceptable" is very different than saying that THIS practice is acceptable. Saying some practices are ok is not enough to say this one is.
Defending that a particular practice is acceptable requires a fairly strong answer choice. Sometimes people shy away from strong answer choices, but that's not always a great technique. You need to know what sort of question you have, and what that question requires you to do. Answer choice (E) would be a terrible choice if it was asing what must be true---the language is too strong. But when asking what we need in order to draw the conclusion? The language is perfect.
The argument basically holds that since the threat of competition will keep prices from getting unreasonable, predatory pricing is acceptable. Our answer choice (E) states that any pricing practice that does not result in unreasonable prices should be acceptable. Without that answer choice, we wouldn't be able to say that the predatory practices should be acceptable. We need to link the fact that the practices do not result in unreasonable prices with the fact that they should be acceptable. Without strong language linking those two ideas, we cannot support the conclusion.
Hope that helps,
Rachael