- Fri Jan 21, 2011 12:00 am
#22930
Complete Question Explanation
Assumption. The correct answer choice is (E)
This is one of those stimuli put in the middle of the test to tangle up your brain as you attempt to sort through all of the "actions" and "consequences." We know from the stimulus that knowing whether an action is good requires knowing whether its consequences are good, and that we cannot know the future. This information is combined to lead to the conclusion that good actions are impossible. However, the information provided is insufficient to lead us to this conclusion, so we must find the answer choice that fills the gap.
Answer Choice (A): This answer choice is completely irrelevant and should be discarded.
Answer Choice (B): This answer choice is also irrelevant to the argument. Just because we can know that past actions are good does nothing to address the argument that our inability to know the future makes good actions impossible.
Answer Choice (C): Again, this does nothing to address the issue that we must know whether consequences are good and since we cannot know the future, good actions are impossible. Everything here deals with whether an action is good, which is completely separate from the determination of whether an action is bad.
Answer Choice (D): This is another answer choice that is completely irrelevant and should be discarded quickly.
Answer Choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. The stimulus conclusion is based upon the fact that our inability to know whether an action will be good makes good actions impossible. Using the assumption negation technique, if you were to say that for an action to be good we do not need to be able to know that it is good, that would directly attack that basis for the stimulus conclusion.
Assumption. The correct answer choice is (E)
This is one of those stimuli put in the middle of the test to tangle up your brain as you attempt to sort through all of the "actions" and "consequences." We know from the stimulus that knowing whether an action is good requires knowing whether its consequences are good, and that we cannot know the future. This information is combined to lead to the conclusion that good actions are impossible. However, the information provided is insufficient to lead us to this conclusion, so we must find the answer choice that fills the gap.
Answer Choice (A): This answer choice is completely irrelevant and should be discarded.
Answer Choice (B): This answer choice is also irrelevant to the argument. Just because we can know that past actions are good does nothing to address the argument that our inability to know the future makes good actions impossible.
Answer Choice (C): Again, this does nothing to address the issue that we must know whether consequences are good and since we cannot know the future, good actions are impossible. Everything here deals with whether an action is good, which is completely separate from the determination of whether an action is bad.
Answer Choice (D): This is another answer choice that is completely irrelevant and should be discarded quickly.
Answer Choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. The stimulus conclusion is based upon the fact that our inability to know whether an action will be good makes good actions impossible. Using the assumption negation technique, if you were to say that for an action to be good we do not need to be able to know that it is good, that would directly attack that basis for the stimulus conclusion.