- Fri May 19, 2017 12:49 pm
#35112
Complete Question Explanation
Assumption. The correct answer choice is (E)
Your task in this Assumption question is to select the answer that contains information required for
the conclusion to be valid. Reordered, the argument proceeds:
Premise: syndicated political columnists often use their newspaper columns to try to
persuade readers to vote a certain way
Premise: by the time such a column appears, nearly all who will vote in the election
will have already made a decision about which candidate to vote for
Conclusion: thus, the political columnists’ efforts to persuade voters rarely succeed
Because there is no “rogue” information in the conclusion that did not appear previously in the
argument, your prephrase begins with the understanding that you are dealing with a Defender style
assumption question. The weakness in the argument is that it assumes that because voters have
already made a decision about voting before the column appears, that their decision cannot be
affected by the column’s attempts to persuade.
The correct answer will likely raise the possibility that a voter’s initial decision cannot be changed,
but will do so in order to dismiss it, thus defending the conclusion against an attack on that
weakness. The incorrect answers will not contain information required for the conclusion to be
invalid. Instead, they may have no effect on the conclusion, support the conclusion while not be
required information, or could undermine the conclusion.
Answer choice (A): This choice is incorrect because it has no effect on the conclusion, which
allowed that the columnists’ efforts would sometimes succeed, and was based on the notion that
nearly all voters have reached a decision about which candidate to vote for before the column
appears.
Answer choice (B): This choice has no effect on the conclusion, which depended on nearly all voters
having already made up their minds, and therefore not being persuaded by the columns at all.
Answer choice (C): As with choice (B), this answer has no effect on the argument, which pertained
only to the question of whether the columns appear too late to have any effect on the readers.
Answer choice (D): This choice has no effect on the conclusion, because the argument had nothing
to do with this difference between regular and infrequent readers.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. This choice is correct because it raises the
possibility that the readers could change their mind about which candidate to vote for, but does so
only to dismiss it, defending the conclusion from an attack on that basis. If it were not the case that
people rarely can be persuaded after they have made a decision about which candidate to vote for,
then the conclusion would be invalid.
Assumption. The correct answer choice is (E)
Your task in this Assumption question is to select the answer that contains information required for
the conclusion to be valid. Reordered, the argument proceeds:
Premise: syndicated political columnists often use their newspaper columns to try to
persuade readers to vote a certain way
Premise: by the time such a column appears, nearly all who will vote in the election
will have already made a decision about which candidate to vote for
Conclusion: thus, the political columnists’ efforts to persuade voters rarely succeed
Because there is no “rogue” information in the conclusion that did not appear previously in the
argument, your prephrase begins with the understanding that you are dealing with a Defender style
assumption question. The weakness in the argument is that it assumes that because voters have
already made a decision about voting before the column appears, that their decision cannot be
affected by the column’s attempts to persuade.
The correct answer will likely raise the possibility that a voter’s initial decision cannot be changed,
but will do so in order to dismiss it, thus defending the conclusion against an attack on that
weakness. The incorrect answers will not contain information required for the conclusion to be
invalid. Instead, they may have no effect on the conclusion, support the conclusion while not be
required information, or could undermine the conclusion.
Answer choice (A): This choice is incorrect because it has no effect on the conclusion, which
allowed that the columnists’ efforts would sometimes succeed, and was based on the notion that
nearly all voters have reached a decision about which candidate to vote for before the column
appears.
Answer choice (B): This choice has no effect on the conclusion, which depended on nearly all voters
having already made up their minds, and therefore not being persuaded by the columns at all.
Answer choice (C): As with choice (B), this answer has no effect on the argument, which pertained
only to the question of whether the columns appear too late to have any effect on the readers.
Answer choice (D): This choice has no effect on the conclusion, because the argument had nothing
to do with this difference between regular and infrequent readers.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. This choice is correct because it raises the
possibility that the readers could change their mind about which candidate to vote for, but does so
only to dismiss it, defending the conclusion from an attack on that basis. If it were not the case that
people rarely can be persuaded after they have made a decision about which candidate to vote for,
then the conclusion would be invalid.