- Thu Feb 20, 2014 12:00 am
#32600
Complete Question Explanation
Justify the Conclusion—PR, SN. The correct answer choice is (B)
This stimulus provides a principle and its application. The principle takes the form of a conditional rule with a three-part, compound sufficient condition. The application informs you that just one of those sufficient conditions has been met, but then concludes that the necessary condition must be satisfied.
The conditional principle is a rule used to determine whether someone with overdue library books must be fined. There are three sufficient conditions, and if all three are satisfied, then the person must be fined. The three conditions are: 1) the person has more than one book overdue at the same time; 2) some of the overdue books are not children’s books; and 3) the person has been fined previously for overdue books.
We can diagram this rule as:
1+ = more than one overdue book at the same time
CB = some of the overdue books are not children’s books
PBF = person has previously been fined for overdue books
Fine = the person must be fined
Sufficient Necessary
1+
+
CB Fine
+
PBF
The application tells us only that Kessler currently has three overdue library books, saying nothing about the other two sufficient conditions, yet concludes that Kessler must be fined.
The question stem provides that this is a Justify the Conclusion question. Our prephrase is that in order to justify the application, the correct answer choice will have to provide the remaining two sufficient conditions, namely that some of the overdue books are not children’s books, and that Kessler has been previously been fined for overdue books.
Answer choice (A): This answer choice is incorrect, because it leaves open the option that Kessler’s overdue books might all be children’s books. While this choice says that “some of the books that Kessler currently has out on loan from the library” are not children’s books, it may be the case that all of the overdue books are children’s books.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice, because it provides the remaining two sufficient conditions. One of Kessler’s three overdue books is not a children’s book, and he has been fined in the past for having an overdue book.
Answer choice (C): While this answer choice tells us that Kessler has previously returned books late, it does not tells us that Kessler has previously been fined for overdue books.
Answer choice (D): This answer choice tells us that Kessler has been fined in the past for overdue books, but does not tell us whether any of Kessler’s books that are currently overdue are not children’s books.
Answer choice (E): This answer choice explicitly provides that Keller has not previously been fined for overdue books.
Justify the Conclusion—PR, SN. The correct answer choice is (B)
This stimulus provides a principle and its application. The principle takes the form of a conditional rule with a three-part, compound sufficient condition. The application informs you that just one of those sufficient conditions has been met, but then concludes that the necessary condition must be satisfied.
The conditional principle is a rule used to determine whether someone with overdue library books must be fined. There are three sufficient conditions, and if all three are satisfied, then the person must be fined. The three conditions are: 1) the person has more than one book overdue at the same time; 2) some of the overdue books are not children’s books; and 3) the person has been fined previously for overdue books.
We can diagram this rule as:
1+ = more than one overdue book at the same time
CB = some of the overdue books are not children’s books
PBF = person has previously been fined for overdue books
Fine = the person must be fined
Sufficient Necessary
1+
+
CB Fine
+
PBF
The application tells us only that Kessler currently has three overdue library books, saying nothing about the other two sufficient conditions, yet concludes that Kessler must be fined.
The question stem provides that this is a Justify the Conclusion question. Our prephrase is that in order to justify the application, the correct answer choice will have to provide the remaining two sufficient conditions, namely that some of the overdue books are not children’s books, and that Kessler has been previously been fined for overdue books.
Answer choice (A): This answer choice is incorrect, because it leaves open the option that Kessler’s overdue books might all be children’s books. While this choice says that “some of the books that Kessler currently has out on loan from the library” are not children’s books, it may be the case that all of the overdue books are children’s books.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice, because it provides the remaining two sufficient conditions. One of Kessler’s three overdue books is not a children’s book, and he has been fined in the past for having an overdue book.
Answer choice (C): While this answer choice tells us that Kessler has previously returned books late, it does not tells us that Kessler has previously been fined for overdue books.
Answer choice (D): This answer choice tells us that Kessler has been fined in the past for overdue books, but does not tell us whether any of Kessler’s books that are currently overdue are not children’s books.
Answer choice (E): This answer choice explicitly provides that Keller has not previously been fined for overdue books.