- Sat Jan 20, 2018 12:00 am
#64137
Complete Question Explanation
Justify the Conclusion—SN. The correct answer choice is (B)
In this stimulus the author presents a series of conditional statements, concluding that innovators
anger the majority. The conditional statements are diagrammed below:
A real creative genius is one who is not content to simply accept widely held beliefs:
real creative genius content to accept wide beliefs
Thus, the author concludes, such real creative geniuses tend to anger the majority. This conclusion is
followed by further conditional statements:
Those not content to accept others’ beliefs seek out controversy:
content to accept wide beliefs seek controversy
...and those who seek controversy enjoy showing how popular views are wrong:
seek controversy like to demonstrate popular falsehoods
Putting this conditional chain together, we arrive at the following:
real genius content w/ wide beliefs seek controversy demonstrate popular falsehoods
As we can see from the diagram, there is no reference to angering the majority, yet the author’s
conclusion is that real creative geniuses tend to anger the majority. Since the question stem requires
us to justify the conclusion, the tendency to anger the majority must be somehow linked to the
conditional chain above.
Answer choice (A): The conclusion that we must justify in this stimulus is that real creative geniuses,
who are dissatisfied with merely habitual assent to widely held beliefs tend to anger the majority.
This choice provides that the geniuses get angry themselves. This does not justify the conclusion as
needed.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. This answer provides that people who like
to demonstrate the falsehoods of popular viewpoints anger the majority:
demonstrate popular falsehoods anger majority
So we can link this to the end of the conditional chain provided in the stimulus:
real genius not content w/ wide beliefs seek controversy demonstrate pop. falsehoods anger majority
Based on the conditional diagram above, we can see that this answer choice allows us to logically
draw the conclusion that real creative geniuses tend to anger the majority.
Answer choice (C): This choice is close, but this answer provides that people get angered when
people hold different beliefs themselves. This is subtly different from the link we need, which is that
people get angry when others demonstrate the falsehood of commonly held beliefs.
Answer choice (D): This answer provides the mistaken reversal of the link we actually need. This
choice says that if you anger the majority, then you enjoy demonstrating the falsehood of commonly
held beliefs:
anger the majority enjoy demonstrating popular false beliefs
The link that we need is the exact reverse—that those who enjoy demonstrating popular false beliefs
tend to anger the majority:
enjoy demonstrating popular false beliefs anger the majority
This is the link provided by the correct answer choice, (B).
Answer choice (E): Much like incorrect answer choice (D), this choice provides the mistaken
reversal of a conditional statement that would logically justify the author’s conclusion. Here we are
provided with the following: if you anger the majority, then you are not content just accepting widely
held beliefs:
anger the majority content to accept widely held beliefs
This choice does not provide the needed link, because it cannot be added to the author’s conditional
chain to justify the author’s conclusion.
If this choice had provided the opposite statement, it would be the correct answer choice—if we
knew that all those not content to accept widely held beliefs tended to anger the majority, then we
could logically draw the author’s conclusion as follows:
real creative genius content to accept wide beliefs anger the majority
Justify the Conclusion—SN. The correct answer choice is (B)
In this stimulus the author presents a series of conditional statements, concluding that innovators
anger the majority. The conditional statements are diagrammed below:
A real creative genius is one who is not content to simply accept widely held beliefs:
real creative genius content to accept wide beliefs
Thus, the author concludes, such real creative geniuses tend to anger the majority. This conclusion is
followed by further conditional statements:
Those not content to accept others’ beliefs seek out controversy:
content to accept wide beliefs seek controversy
...and those who seek controversy enjoy showing how popular views are wrong:
seek controversy like to demonstrate popular falsehoods
Putting this conditional chain together, we arrive at the following:
real genius content w/ wide beliefs seek controversy demonstrate popular falsehoods
As we can see from the diagram, there is no reference to angering the majority, yet the author’s
conclusion is that real creative geniuses tend to anger the majority. Since the question stem requires
us to justify the conclusion, the tendency to anger the majority must be somehow linked to the
conditional chain above.
Answer choice (A): The conclusion that we must justify in this stimulus is that real creative geniuses,
who are dissatisfied with merely habitual assent to widely held beliefs tend to anger the majority.
This choice provides that the geniuses get angry themselves. This does not justify the conclusion as
needed.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. This answer provides that people who like
to demonstrate the falsehoods of popular viewpoints anger the majority:
demonstrate popular falsehoods anger majority
So we can link this to the end of the conditional chain provided in the stimulus:
real genius not content w/ wide beliefs seek controversy demonstrate pop. falsehoods anger majority
Based on the conditional diagram above, we can see that this answer choice allows us to logically
draw the conclusion that real creative geniuses tend to anger the majority.
Answer choice (C): This choice is close, but this answer provides that people get angered when
people hold different beliefs themselves. This is subtly different from the link we need, which is that
people get angry when others demonstrate the falsehood of commonly held beliefs.
Answer choice (D): This answer provides the mistaken reversal of the link we actually need. This
choice says that if you anger the majority, then you enjoy demonstrating the falsehood of commonly
held beliefs:
anger the majority enjoy demonstrating popular false beliefs
The link that we need is the exact reverse—that those who enjoy demonstrating popular false beliefs
tend to anger the majority:
enjoy demonstrating popular false beliefs anger the majority
This is the link provided by the correct answer choice, (B).
Answer choice (E): Much like incorrect answer choice (D), this choice provides the mistaken
reversal of a conditional statement that would logically justify the author’s conclusion. Here we are
provided with the following: if you anger the majority, then you are not content just accepting widely
held beliefs:
anger the majority content to accept widely held beliefs
This choice does not provide the needed link, because it cannot be added to the author’s conditional
chain to justify the author’s conclusion.
If this choice had provided the opposite statement, it would be the correct answer choice—if we
knew that all those not content to accept widely held beliefs tended to anger the majority, then we
could logically draw the author’s conclusion as follows:
real creative genius content to accept wide beliefs anger the majority