- Sat Apr 09, 2016 11:40 am
#22921
Complete Question Explanation
Justify the Conclusion-SN. The correct answer choice is (D)
To solve this question quickly and efficiently, you need to diagram the conditional reasoning that underlies the argument:
Answer choice (A): Love someone → Love anyone
This answer choice fails to link the first premise to the rest of the argument, and instead introduces another conditional element (loving someone). If whoever loves someone loves everyone, and premise #2 requires that whoever loves anyone is happy, we can only conclude that whoever loves someone is happy. Since this is not the conclusion we are asked to justify, this answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (B): Love anyone → Love someone
This answer choice has the same implications as answer choice (A); in fact, it is the Mistaken Reversal of that answer. Both answer choices fail to link the element of kindness to the conclusion and are therefore incorrect.
Answer choice (C): Happy → Love anyone
This answer choice is the Mistaken Reversal of the second premise of the argument. This creates a circular chain of reasoning, wherein each statement both implies and is implied by the other.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. See discussion above. Even if you failed to diagram the conditional reasoning relationships in this argument, you should notice that this answer choice is the only one that mentions the element of "loved by," and one of only two answer choices that refers to being "kind." Both of these elements are constitutive of the first premise of the argument and must be linked to the conclusion.
Answer choice (E): Love anyone → Kind
When added to the premises, this statement only proves that whoever loves anyone is both kind and happy. But this does not lead to the conclusion that whoever is kind is happy, since some people who are kind may not love anyone. Two necessary conditions (kindness and happiness) which are both inferred by the same sufficient condition (loving anyone) do not infer each other.
Justify the Conclusion-SN. The correct answer choice is (D)
To solve this question quickly and efficiently, you need to diagram the conditional reasoning that underlies the argument:
- Premise: Kind → Loved by others
Premise: Love anyone → Happy
Conclusion: Kind → Happy
- Loved by others → Love anyone
- Love others → Loved by others
Answer choice (A): Love someone → Love anyone
This answer choice fails to link the first premise to the rest of the argument, and instead introduces another conditional element (loving someone). If whoever loves someone loves everyone, and premise #2 requires that whoever loves anyone is happy, we can only conclude that whoever loves someone is happy. Since this is not the conclusion we are asked to justify, this answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (B): Love anyone → Love someone
This answer choice has the same implications as answer choice (A); in fact, it is the Mistaken Reversal of that answer. Both answer choices fail to link the element of kindness to the conclusion and are therefore incorrect.
Answer choice (C): Happy → Love anyone
This answer choice is the Mistaken Reversal of the second premise of the argument. This creates a circular chain of reasoning, wherein each statement both implies and is implied by the other.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. See discussion above. Even if you failed to diagram the conditional reasoning relationships in this argument, you should notice that this answer choice is the only one that mentions the element of "loved by," and one of only two answer choices that refers to being "kind." Both of these elements are constitutive of the first premise of the argument and must be linked to the conclusion.
Answer choice (E): Love anyone → Kind
When added to the premises, this statement only proves that whoever loves anyone is both kind and happy. But this does not lead to the conclusion that whoever is kind is happy, since some people who are kind may not love anyone. Two necessary conditions (kindness and happiness) which are both inferred by the same sufficient condition (loving anyone) do not infer each other.