- Mon Nov 03, 2014 11:55 pm
#17254
Hi Pacer,
Regarding question 16, I would classify the first sentence as background information what has occurred in the past. The second sentence is not a subconclusion, because nothing else in the stimulus supports it. It is a premise, unsupported by any other statement in the stimulus, and more specifically it is a principle, stating what contemporary societies should do.
I agree with you that the last sentence is the conclusion. In essence, you have an argument that consists of one premise and one conclusion:
P: contemporary societies should fulfill their obligation as stewards of cultural heritage
C: contemporary societies must finance fine arts.
This is a fairly common situation, in which there is one premise and one, definitive conclusion. When this occurs, the author is essentially arguing, "if premise, then conclusion." In a Assumption question, you consider what is required by the conclusion. In this case, the assumption is that in order for societies to fulfill their obligation as stewards of cultural heritage, they must help finance fine arts. The assumption is the unstated rule tying together the premise and the conclusion.
Your problem with prephrasing is a common one. You expect your self to come up with some sort of scenario that is required for the conclusion to be valid. Any time your prephrase process requires you to be creative, it's a bad process. Focus instead on the conclusion, and the evidence provided for it.
If there is just one premise for the conclusion, you can always prephrase that the author is applying the rule, "if premise, then conclusion." if there is brand new information in the conclusion, then you know that the correct answer choice will tie that new information to the premises. If there is more than one premise and there is no new information in the conclusion, then the prephrase requires you to identify some other gap in the argumentation.
Hope that helps.
Ron