- Fri Jan 21, 2011 12:00 am
#31485
Complete Question Explanation
Strengthen—PR. The correct answer choice is (B)
The argument proceeds as follows: strong record sales could mean that an underground group’s music is too trendy, while weak sales could mean that the group is simply incompetent. (Neither of these claims is conditional, because conditional relationships are absolute, not tentative). On this basis, the author concludes that how well the rock group’s recordings sell is no mark of success. You should immediately spot the logical gap between the premises and the conclusion: neither “trendy” nor “incompetent” are explicitly associated with success. Indeed, the author does not provide any standard for determining what makes an underground group successful. The correct answer choice to this Strengthen question must provide that standard.
Answer Choice (A): The contrapositive of this answer choice states that especially strong or especially weak sales would guarantee that a group is unsuccessful. However, we do not know that the music discussed in the premises had especially strong or weak sales. Since this answer choice does not apply to the facts of the stimulus, it does not strengthen the argument.
Answer Choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. If any rock group that is either too trendy or incompetent is unsuccessful as an underground group, then neither strong nor weak sales would be an indicator of success. This principle correctly links the premises to the conclusion of the argument, and is therefore correct.
Answer Choice (C): The stimulus tells us that many underground musicians consider weak sales desirable. If this answer choice is true, then weak sales are not a mark of a group’s success. While this answer supports the idea that weak sales are not a mark of a successful underground group, strong sales might still be an indicator of success. Since this answer choice only addresses one aspect of sales, it does not strengthen the argument as much as answer choice (B).
Answer Choice (D): This answer choice weakens the argument. If competent bands that do not sell well are successful, then poor sales are a mark of success.
Answer Choice (E): This answer choice does not strengthen the argument because it does not apply to the facts in the stimulus. This answer choice applies to competent underground groups and authentically underground music. The stimulus, by contrast, addressed incompetent underground groups and trendy (non-authentic) underground music. Even if competence and authenticity were not marks of success, incompetence and trendiness might be.
Strengthen—PR. The correct answer choice is (B)
The argument proceeds as follows: strong record sales could mean that an underground group’s music is too trendy, while weak sales could mean that the group is simply incompetent. (Neither of these claims is conditional, because conditional relationships are absolute, not tentative). On this basis, the author concludes that how well the rock group’s recordings sell is no mark of success. You should immediately spot the logical gap between the premises and the conclusion: neither “trendy” nor “incompetent” are explicitly associated with success. Indeed, the author does not provide any standard for determining what makes an underground group successful. The correct answer choice to this Strengthen question must provide that standard.
Answer Choice (A): The contrapositive of this answer choice states that especially strong or especially weak sales would guarantee that a group is unsuccessful. However, we do not know that the music discussed in the premises had especially strong or weak sales. Since this answer choice does not apply to the facts of the stimulus, it does not strengthen the argument.
Answer Choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. If any rock group that is either too trendy or incompetent is unsuccessful as an underground group, then neither strong nor weak sales would be an indicator of success. This principle correctly links the premises to the conclusion of the argument, and is therefore correct.
Answer Choice (C): The stimulus tells us that many underground musicians consider weak sales desirable. If this answer choice is true, then weak sales are not a mark of a group’s success. While this answer supports the idea that weak sales are not a mark of a successful underground group, strong sales might still be an indicator of success. Since this answer choice only addresses one aspect of sales, it does not strengthen the argument as much as answer choice (B).
Answer Choice (D): This answer choice weakens the argument. If competent bands that do not sell well are successful, then poor sales are a mark of success.
Answer Choice (E): This answer choice does not strengthen the argument because it does not apply to the facts in the stimulus. This answer choice applies to competent underground groups and authentically underground music. The stimulus, by contrast, addressed incompetent underground groups and trendy (non-authentic) underground music. Even if competence and authenticity were not marks of success, incompetence and trendiness might be.