- Sat Jan 21, 2012 12:00 am
#64121
Complete Question Explanation
Assumption—SN. The correct answer choice is (D)
This critic provides several conditional statements, in the form of two very long sentences. The first
is that modern literary works cannot be tragedies like those from the past, unless their characters
are seen as having enduring nobility. In order to diagram this sentence, we can apply the Unless
Formula, which provides that the condition which follows the word “unless” is the necessary
condition, and the other condition must be negated and becomes the sufficient.
In this case, modern works cannot be tragedies like the ancient ones unless their characters are seen
as noble:
modern tragedies characters possess nobility
The contrapositive of this statement, diagrammed below, tells us that if characters cannot be seen as
possessing nobility, then there can be no modern tragedies:
characters possess nobility modern tragedies
The critic goes on to say that in this age, we know longer believe that humans are bound by fate, so it
is impossible for a modern work to be a tragedy:
believe humans bound by fate modern tragedies
Considering the two conditional statements above, we might note a “leap” from the premise to the
conclusion: If characters cannot be seen as possessing nobility, there can be no modern tragedies.
Thus, since we no longer believe that humans are bound by fate, there can be no modern tragedies.
If we notice the missing link in these conditional statements, we should not be surprised to see the
stimulus followed by an assumption question. To answer this supporter assumption question, the
correct choice will link the two “rogue elements”—the condition that “characters cannot possess
nobility”, and the condition that “humans are not seen as being bound by fate.”
Answer choice (A): The word “should” in this answer choice would reflect a value judgement, and
the author makes no such assertion in the stimulus.
Answer choice (B): This choice uses the word “false,” which is a stronger claim than the author
makes in the stimulus. The stimulus provides only that the no one takes this belief seriously, which is
not the same as claiming that the belief is absolutely false.
Answer choice (C): The author does not claim that past tragedies have been misclassified, but rather
that modern plays cannot be properly characterized as tragedies, because we no longer seriously
believe in fate, so we no longer see characters as possessing nobility.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice, which links the rogue elements as required
by the question. This choice says that if one is not seen as having his or her endeavors guided by
fate, one will not be seen as possessing nobility. When this is diagrammed and combined with the
information from the stimulus, we can see that this is the needed assumption:
Premise: characters possess nobility modern tragedies
+ Assumption: believe humans bound by fate characters possess nobility
Conclusion: believe humans bound by fate characters possess nobility modern tragedies
Answer choice (E): The author actually lists such endurance as a required part of possessing nobility,
so this answer choice is not accurate.
Assumption—SN. The correct answer choice is (D)
This critic provides several conditional statements, in the form of two very long sentences. The first
is that modern literary works cannot be tragedies like those from the past, unless their characters
are seen as having enduring nobility. In order to diagram this sentence, we can apply the Unless
Formula, which provides that the condition which follows the word “unless” is the necessary
condition, and the other condition must be negated and becomes the sufficient.
In this case, modern works cannot be tragedies like the ancient ones unless their characters are seen
as noble:
modern tragedies characters possess nobility
The contrapositive of this statement, diagrammed below, tells us that if characters cannot be seen as
possessing nobility, then there can be no modern tragedies:
characters possess nobility modern tragedies
The critic goes on to say that in this age, we know longer believe that humans are bound by fate, so it
is impossible for a modern work to be a tragedy:
believe humans bound by fate modern tragedies
Considering the two conditional statements above, we might note a “leap” from the premise to the
conclusion: If characters cannot be seen as possessing nobility, there can be no modern tragedies.
Thus, since we no longer believe that humans are bound by fate, there can be no modern tragedies.
If we notice the missing link in these conditional statements, we should not be surprised to see the
stimulus followed by an assumption question. To answer this supporter assumption question, the
correct choice will link the two “rogue elements”—the condition that “characters cannot possess
nobility”, and the condition that “humans are not seen as being bound by fate.”
Answer choice (A): The word “should” in this answer choice would reflect a value judgement, and
the author makes no such assertion in the stimulus.
Answer choice (B): This choice uses the word “false,” which is a stronger claim than the author
makes in the stimulus. The stimulus provides only that the no one takes this belief seriously, which is
not the same as claiming that the belief is absolutely false.
Answer choice (C): The author does not claim that past tragedies have been misclassified, but rather
that modern plays cannot be properly characterized as tragedies, because we no longer seriously
believe in fate, so we no longer see characters as possessing nobility.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice, which links the rogue elements as required
by the question. This choice says that if one is not seen as having his or her endeavors guided by
fate, one will not be seen as possessing nobility. When this is diagrammed and combined with the
information from the stimulus, we can see that this is the needed assumption:
Premise: characters possess nobility modern tragedies
+ Assumption: believe humans bound by fate characters possess nobility
Conclusion: believe humans bound by fate characters possess nobility modern tragedies
Answer choice (E): The author actually lists such endurance as a required part of possessing nobility,
so this answer choice is not accurate.