- Tue Apr 19, 2016 4:57 pm
#23244
Complete Question Explanation
Parallel Reasoning-SN. The correct answer choice is (D)
The argument in the stimulus can be summarized as follows:
Answer choice (A): The argument here contains no gaps between the premises and the conclusion, as the conclusion is presented as a conditional statement (safety improvement → employee cooperation). Had the author stated that it's overly optimistic to expect safety improvement, this would have been a better answer choice.
Answer choice (B): The logic here can be summarized as follows:
Answer choice (C): The conclusion in this answer choice is conditional, not absolute. Furthermore, there are no logical gaps between the premises and the conclusion, as the combination of the two premises provide sufficient support for the conclusion:
Answer choice (E): The conclusion test can be used to quickly eliminate this answer choice, since an imperative about a certain course of action ("we must not report our poor performance") will never match an objective observation about the likelihood of a given outcome ("it would be overly optimistic to expect stable inflation rates").
Parallel Reasoning-SN. The correct answer choice is (D)
The argument in the stimulus can be summarized as follows:
- Premise (1): Stable inflation decrease economic growth
Premise (2): Decrease economic growth full cooperation
Conclusion: Stable inflation is unlikely
- Full cooperation Decrease of economic growth Stable inflation
Answer choice (A): The argument here contains no gaps between the premises and the conclusion, as the conclusion is presented as a conditional statement (safety improvement → employee cooperation). Had the author stated that it's overly optimistic to expect safety improvement, this would have been a better answer choice.
Answer choice (B): The logic here can be summarized as follows:
- Premise (1): Improving efficiency eliminate redundancy
Premise (2): Eliminate redundancy dismiss senior employees
Conclusion: Some senior employees will be dismissed
Answer choice (C): The conclusion in this answer choice is conditional, not absolute. Furthermore, there are no logical gaps between the premises and the conclusion, as the combination of the two premises provide sufficient support for the conclusion:
- Premise (1): Optimal decision Thorough examination
Premise (2): Thorough examination Presentation delayed
Conclusion: Optimal decision Presentation delayed
- Premise (1): Vehicle safety Objective tests
Premise (2): Objective tests Cost overruns
Conclusion: Vehicle safety is unlikely
Answer choice (E): The conclusion test can be used to quickly eliminate this answer choice, since an imperative about a certain course of action ("we must not report our poor performance") will never match an objective observation about the likelihood of a given outcome ("it would be overly optimistic to expect stable inflation rates").