- Sat Jan 20, 2018 12:00 am
#64124
Complete Question Explanation
Justify the Conclusion—SN.. The correct answer choice is (B)
Here we are presented with several conditional statements, including a conclusion that must be
justified. The first statement is that if you believe in democracy, you respect the wisdom of the
masses:
believe in democracy respect wisdom of masses
The contrapositive of this statement tells us that if you don’t respect the wisdom of the masses, then
you do not believe democracy:
respect wisdom of masses believe in democracy
The next statement concerns Griley, who believes popular artwork is unlikely to be good. From this
premise the author concludes that Griley does not believe in democracy:
popular artwork is unlikely to be good believe in democracy
Considering the above two conditional statements, we can clearly see the logical “leap” to the
conclusion:
If you don’t respect the wisdom of the masses, then you don’t believe in democracy.
Thus, if you believe popular art is unlikely to be good, then you don’t believe in democracy. The
author sees Griley’s popular art criticism as reflecting a lack of respect for the wisdom of the masses.
Having noted this missing link in the author’s conditional reasoning chain, we should not be
surprised to see a Justify question stem follow.
The correct answer choice will be the one that effectively links the “rogue elements” discussed
above: a lack of confidence in the quality of popular artwork and a failure to respect the wisdom of
the masses.
Answer choice (A): The author does say that Griley is an elitist, but this fact is not a component of
any of the conditional rules presented. Further, this choice fails to link the rogue elements from the
stimulus, so this choice cannot justify the conclusion drawn by the author.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. It is the only choice which links the rogue
elements from the stimulus and allows the author’s conditional conclusion to be properly drawn, as
we can see by diagramming the relevant statements:
Premise (contrapositive): respect wisdom of masses believe in democracy
+ Answer choice: believe pop artwork unlikely good respect wisdom of masses
pop artwork unlikely good respect wisdom of masses believe in democracy
The conditional chain above illustrates how this answer choice justifies the author’s conclusion: If
Griley believes that popular artwork is unlikely to be good, then he does not respect the wisdom of
the masses. Thus, he does not believe in democracy.
Answer choice (C): The stimulus provides that Griley is an elitist, so this choice provides no useful
information—there is no reason to consider what happens if Griley is not an elitist, and no way that
this statement can justify the author’s conclusion. And although this choice includes the condition
“high regard for the wisdom of the masses,” it does not link it to beliefs about popular artwork, so it
cannot be the right answer choice.
Answer choice (D): In order to justify the author’s conclusion about Griley, we need to assume that
people who are skeptical about the quality of popular art (such as Griley) do not have enough respect
for the wisdom of the masses. This choice reverses this condition, so it cannot justify the author’s
conclusion.
Answer choice (E): This choice says that respect for the wisdom of the masses requires a belief in
democracy. This choice does not provide the needed link to Griley’s beliefs about popular art, so it
does not justify the author’s conclusion that Griley doesn’t believe in democracy.
Justify the Conclusion—SN.. The correct answer choice is (B)
Here we are presented with several conditional statements, including a conclusion that must be
justified. The first statement is that if you believe in democracy, you respect the wisdom of the
masses:
believe in democracy respect wisdom of masses
The contrapositive of this statement tells us that if you don’t respect the wisdom of the masses, then
you do not believe democracy:
respect wisdom of masses believe in democracy
The next statement concerns Griley, who believes popular artwork is unlikely to be good. From this
premise the author concludes that Griley does not believe in democracy:
popular artwork is unlikely to be good believe in democracy
Considering the above two conditional statements, we can clearly see the logical “leap” to the
conclusion:
If you don’t respect the wisdom of the masses, then you don’t believe in democracy.
Thus, if you believe popular art is unlikely to be good, then you don’t believe in democracy. The
author sees Griley’s popular art criticism as reflecting a lack of respect for the wisdom of the masses.
Having noted this missing link in the author’s conditional reasoning chain, we should not be
surprised to see a Justify question stem follow.
The correct answer choice will be the one that effectively links the “rogue elements” discussed
above: a lack of confidence in the quality of popular artwork and a failure to respect the wisdom of
the masses.
Answer choice (A): The author does say that Griley is an elitist, but this fact is not a component of
any of the conditional rules presented. Further, this choice fails to link the rogue elements from the
stimulus, so this choice cannot justify the conclusion drawn by the author.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. It is the only choice which links the rogue
elements from the stimulus and allows the author’s conditional conclusion to be properly drawn, as
we can see by diagramming the relevant statements:
Premise (contrapositive): respect wisdom of masses believe in democracy
+ Answer choice: believe pop artwork unlikely good respect wisdom of masses
pop artwork unlikely good respect wisdom of masses believe in democracy
The conditional chain above illustrates how this answer choice justifies the author’s conclusion: If
Griley believes that popular artwork is unlikely to be good, then he does not respect the wisdom of
the masses. Thus, he does not believe in democracy.
Answer choice (C): The stimulus provides that Griley is an elitist, so this choice provides no useful
information—there is no reason to consider what happens if Griley is not an elitist, and no way that
this statement can justify the author’s conclusion. And although this choice includes the condition
“high regard for the wisdom of the masses,” it does not link it to beliefs about popular artwork, so it
cannot be the right answer choice.
Answer choice (D): In order to justify the author’s conclusion about Griley, we need to assume that
people who are skeptical about the quality of popular art (such as Griley) do not have enough respect
for the wisdom of the masses. This choice reverses this condition, so it cannot justify the author’s
conclusion.
Answer choice (E): This choice says that respect for the wisdom of the masses requires a belief in
democracy. This choice does not provide the needed link to Griley’s beliefs about popular art, so it
does not justify the author’s conclusion that Griley doesn’t believe in democracy.