- Mon Sep 23, 2013 9:56 am
#11103
Complete Question Explanation
Assumption. The correct answer choice is (B)
The philosopher begins with a general observation about the moral worth of human actions, but the crux of his argument can be found in the second sentence of the stimulus. The conclusion resides in the first clause (“to be a moral agent one must have free will”), which is followed by a premise (“one cannot be a moral agent without desiring to conform to a principle”). Note the premise indicator “because” in the beginning of the second clause. After applying the Unless Equation to the premise, the argument can be diagrammed as follows:
Note that the first sentence of the stimulus has no bearing on the rest of the argument. We know this because of the contrastive sentence connector “nonetheless” at the beginning of the second sentence. Although such connectors are not conclusion indicators per se, they always introduce information that is unexpected or surprising in light of the information given in the previous sentence. In this particular instance, the first sentence is not necessary for the argument to make any sense. Therefore, no assumptions were made regarding the claims mentioned in it.
Answer choice (A): This answer choice can be immediately eliminated because it does not connect “free will” to the rest of the argument. Also, having a concern for the consequences of one’s actions is a contextual observation made in the first sentence that plays no structural role in the argument.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice, as it properly connects the necessary condition in the premise to that in the conclusion, and is the only answer choice that brings up the issue of “free will”:
Answer choice (C): As with answer choice (A), this answer choice can be immediately eliminated because it does not connect “free will” to the rest of the argument (being “free” is not equivalent in meaning to having “free will”). Also, the argument need not make any assumptions about whether freedom requires taking the consequences of our actions into account.
Answer choice (D): The author makes no assumptions about the relationship between desire and morality in general: the desire described in the premise is specific to the idea of conforming to a principle. Furthermore, this claim comes very close to being a Mistaken Reversal of the central premise of the argument, testing your ability to correctly interpret conditional statements:
Answer choice (E): What determines the moral worth of one’s actions—their consequences and motives—is an idea introduced in the first sentence of the stimulus. As discussed above, this sentence plays no structural role in the argument. To test if answer choice (E) contains an assumption, apply the Assumption Negation Technique, and ask yourself, “What would the author say to this negation?”
Assumption. The correct answer choice is (B)
The philosopher begins with a general observation about the moral worth of human actions, but the crux of his argument can be found in the second sentence of the stimulus. The conclusion resides in the first clause (“to be a moral agent one must have free will”), which is followed by a premise (“one cannot be a moral agent without desiring to conform to a principle”). Note the premise indicator “because” in the beginning of the second clause. After applying the Unless Equation to the premise, the argument can be diagrammed as follows:
- Premise: Moral agent Desire to conform
Conclusion: Moral agent Free will
- Supporter Assumption: Desire to conform Free will
Note that the first sentence of the stimulus has no bearing on the rest of the argument. We know this because of the contrastive sentence connector “nonetheless” at the beginning of the second sentence. Although such connectors are not conclusion indicators per se, they always introduce information that is unexpected or surprising in light of the information given in the previous sentence. In this particular instance, the first sentence is not necessary for the argument to make any sense. Therefore, no assumptions were made regarding the claims mentioned in it.
Answer choice (A): This answer choice can be immediately eliminated because it does not connect “free will” to the rest of the argument. Also, having a concern for the consequences of one’s actions is a contextual observation made in the first sentence that plays no structural role in the argument.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice, as it properly connects the necessary condition in the premise to that in the conclusion, and is the only answer choice that brings up the issue of “free will”:
- Moral agent Desire to conform Free will
- Desiring to conform to a principle does NOT require free will.
Answer choice (C): As with answer choice (A), this answer choice can be immediately eliminated because it does not connect “free will” to the rest of the argument (being “free” is not equivalent in meaning to having “free will”). Also, the argument need not make any assumptions about whether freedom requires taking the consequences of our actions into account.
Answer choice (D): The author makes no assumptions about the relationship between desire and morality in general: the desire described in the premise is specific to the idea of conforming to a principle. Furthermore, this claim comes very close to being a Mistaken Reversal of the central premise of the argument, testing your ability to correctly interpret conditional statements:
- Premise: Moral agent Desire to conform
Answer choice (D): Desire Moral agent
Answer choice (E): What determines the moral worth of one’s actions—their consequences and motives—is an idea introduced in the first sentence of the stimulus. As discussed above, this sentence plays no structural role in the argument. To test if answer choice (E) contains an assumption, apply the Assumption Negation Technique, and ask yourself, “What would the author say to this negation?”
- We can perform morally worthy actions even if we do NOT conform to a principle.