- Mon Aug 12, 2019 12:05 pm
#67233
I narrowed this down to A and D but put answer A because the Shipping Manager makes the point that there are also other departments that need to function well in order for the company to succeed which I felt was accurately described in answer A. Though it's true that the shipping manager doesn't explicitly say the sales department taken alone is not critical to the company's success as a whole, his argument seemed to heavily imply that, without other departments also operating effectively as well, the sales department can't determine the success of the company as a whole. Is answer A not as attractive as D due to the lack of a reference to "highest priority?"
I was also thrown off by the extreme language of answer D "an absurd consequence" when that appeared to be describing a particularly negative attitude of the shipping manager toward the sales manager's argument that didn't seem reflected in the stimulus.
Can someone explain why answer A is wrong and why answer D is right to attribute the belief that the sales manager's argument draws "an absurd consequence" from the stimulus attributed to the shipping manager? Thanks!
I was also thrown off by the extreme language of answer D "an absurd consequence" when that appeared to be describing a particularly negative attitude of the shipping manager toward the sales manager's argument that didn't seem reflected in the stimulus.
Can someone explain why answer A is wrong and why answer D is right to attribute the belief that the sales manager's argument draws "an absurd consequence" from the stimulus attributed to the shipping manager? Thanks!