- Fri Apr 01, 2016 4:54 pm
#22718
Complete Question Explanation
Main Point. The correct answer choice is (E)
Here the author points out a correlation between values and actions. The author concludes, with the common indicator “thus,” that “knowing what people value can help one predict their actions, producing the following conditional statement:
Know what people value › better predict their actions.
Answer choice (A): This is a clever and very commonly chosen wrong answer, something of a mistaken reversal:
Know people’s actions › better predict what they value
Answer choice (B): The author doesn’t discuss people’s claimed values, but those which are reflected in their actions, so this answer choice cannot be correct.
Answer choice (C): The author’s point is that there is some correlation between values and actions, but this answer choice goes too far—there is no way to justifiably presume that people with different values would never act the same.
Answer choice (D): The author provides a single example of such priorities, and this is offered as a premise in support of the main conclusion.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice, restating our conditional statement from the stimulus: Know what people value › better predict their actions.
Main Point. The correct answer choice is (E)
Here the author points out a correlation between values and actions. The author concludes, with the common indicator “thus,” that “knowing what people value can help one predict their actions, producing the following conditional statement:
Know what people value › better predict their actions.
Answer choice (A): This is a clever and very commonly chosen wrong answer, something of a mistaken reversal:
Know people’s actions › better predict what they value
Answer choice (B): The author doesn’t discuss people’s claimed values, but those which are reflected in their actions, so this answer choice cannot be correct.
Answer choice (C): The author’s point is that there is some correlation between values and actions, but this answer choice goes too far—there is no way to justifiably presume that people with different values would never act the same.
Answer choice (D): The author provides a single example of such priorities, and this is offered as a premise in support of the main conclusion.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice, restating our conditional statement from the stimulus: Know what people value › better predict their actions.