- Sat Feb 01, 2014 4:53 am
#14233
Hello,
I incorrectly answered D. Is this answer incorrect because although "an acute political sense, a disciplined temperament, and a highly developed ability to absorb and retain information" can lead to a successful foreign policy, they are not necessary attributes as this answer choice claims? Having these attributes can only enhance the probability (more so than prior experience can) of having a successful foreign policy but aren't necessary.
After reading the stimulus again, I inferred two things:
1.) a president and prime minister can have prior experience without being successful in foreign policy, which shows that having prior experience does not guarantee success. So, having prior experience is not sufficient.
2.) a president and prime minister can be successful in foreign policy without having prior experience, which shows that prior experience is not necessary for success.
Based on the reasoning above, prior experience neither sufficient or necessary to be successful in foreign policy. Is this the thinking that I should have taken to select answer B?
I incorrectly answered D. Is this answer incorrect because although "an acute political sense, a disciplined temperament, and a highly developed ability to absorb and retain information" can lead to a successful foreign policy, they are not necessary attributes as this answer choice claims? Having these attributes can only enhance the probability (more so than prior experience can) of having a successful foreign policy but aren't necessary.
After reading the stimulus again, I inferred two things:
1.) a president and prime minister can have prior experience without being successful in foreign policy, which shows that having prior experience does not guarantee success. So, having prior experience is not sufficient.
2.) a president and prime minister can be successful in foreign policy without having prior experience, which shows that prior experience is not necessary for success.
Based on the reasoning above, prior experience neither sufficient or necessary to be successful in foreign policy. Is this the thinking that I should have taken to select answer B?