- Fri May 26, 2017 7:10 pm
#35419
Hi Powerscore,
I am having alot of trouble with answer choice E because I think it quite glaringly makes an unwarranted assumption not present in the argument. In fact, the unwarranted assumption was so glaring to me that I easily rejected E as soon as I read it, and made a conscious note of the trap laid in answer choice E by this assumption.
The specific language used in E states that many employees in the managers company would "not prefer" the new software package to the old one. The idea that the employees would not prefer the new software is an unwarranted assumption; I cannot see how it can be read any other way.
All we are told from the argument is that many employees in other companies unofficially continue to use the old software even after the new software was introduced. This is not synonymous with them preferring the old software!! Preference denotes a ranking, as in the old software is perceived by the employees as better (for any number of reasons). But there is absolutely no evidence to support such a claim in the argument.
The employees of the other companies could continue to use the old software for so many reasons besides their preference. I could list over one hundred hypothetical reasons why the employees of the other companies use the old software that have absolutely nothing to do with preference.
Let's grant that all the employees absolutely hate the old software. Just absolutely loathe it. They might still continue to use the old software over the new if...
-The company that makes the old software provides the employees generous kickbacks under the table for the employees that continue to use it.
-The old software contains a bunch of necessary data from years past that cannot be easily exported to the new software.
-The old software is linked to a vital companion program, and that link is needed to perform vital functions of the job. The new software cannot be linked to this companion program because the companion program cannot support it.
-The employees have a grudge against their employer, and they want to work as slowly and inefficiently as possible to manifest their grudge. Using the old software helps them achieve this goal.
I could go on, but as you can see, I can easily hypothesize a multitude of reasons why the employees would continue to use the old software WITHOUT preferring it to the new software. Because the argument allows for such hypotheticals, I truly believe that answer choice E is an unwarranted assumption and cannot be strongly supported by the argument.
If I am missing the forest for the trees here, I would love to hear it! Please help me understand this question better, because right now it has me, quite honestly, annoyed and frustrated.
I am having alot of trouble with answer choice E because I think it quite glaringly makes an unwarranted assumption not present in the argument. In fact, the unwarranted assumption was so glaring to me that I easily rejected E as soon as I read it, and made a conscious note of the trap laid in answer choice E by this assumption.
The specific language used in E states that many employees in the managers company would "not prefer" the new software package to the old one. The idea that the employees would not prefer the new software is an unwarranted assumption; I cannot see how it can be read any other way.
All we are told from the argument is that many employees in other companies unofficially continue to use the old software even after the new software was introduced. This is not synonymous with them preferring the old software!! Preference denotes a ranking, as in the old software is perceived by the employees as better (for any number of reasons). But there is absolutely no evidence to support such a claim in the argument.
The employees of the other companies could continue to use the old software for so many reasons besides their preference. I could list over one hundred hypothetical reasons why the employees of the other companies use the old software that have absolutely nothing to do with preference.
Let's grant that all the employees absolutely hate the old software. Just absolutely loathe it. They might still continue to use the old software over the new if...
-The company that makes the old software provides the employees generous kickbacks under the table for the employees that continue to use it.
-The old software contains a bunch of necessary data from years past that cannot be easily exported to the new software.
-The old software is linked to a vital companion program, and that link is needed to perform vital functions of the job. The new software cannot be linked to this companion program because the companion program cannot support it.
-The employees have a grudge against their employer, and they want to work as slowly and inefficiently as possible to manifest their grudge. Using the old software helps them achieve this goal.
I could go on, but as you can see, I can easily hypothesize a multitude of reasons why the employees would continue to use the old software WITHOUT preferring it to the new software. Because the argument allows for such hypotheticals, I truly believe that answer choice E is an unwarranted assumption and cannot be strongly supported by the argument.
If I am missing the forest for the trees here, I would love to hear it! Please help me understand this question better, because right now it has me, quite honestly, annoyed and frustrated.