Chrismen30 wrote:Thank you for responding Lucas, however I am still a bit unclear as to why number 1 "If the statements above are true, which one of the following conclusions can be properly drawn on the basis of them?" is a Must Be True Question stem and number 15 "The argument is structured to lead to the conclusion that" is a Main Point Question stem. After reviewing it for 1k time I am starting to notice that number 1 states that the stimulus contains "statements" ("If the statements above...") while number 15 states that the stimulus contains an "argument" ("The argument is structured..."). So is it the subtle language from "statements" to "argument" in the stem is what causes it to be a different question stem? Because Must be True questions are usually "statements" while Main Point are usually "arguments"? Please correct me if I'm wrong, albeit its starting to seem like so.
Hello Chrismen30,
With number 1, "If the statements above are true, which one of the following conclusions can be properly drawn on the basis of them?" indicates a Must Be True Question stem because anything can be a conclusion: "Jane likes ice cream", "Moscow is in Russia", "My foot hurts". But only one of those can be the conclusion provable true from the stimulus. (The other four can be a conclusion that has nothing to do with the stimulus.)
Also, it says a conclusion can be properly drawn, not that it is the main conclusion of the stimulus. If the stimulus says, "Joe is going to go to Paris tomorrow, if it''s raining today. It's raining today", then "There is someone on Earth named Joe" is a true "conclusion" (statement), but it is obviously not the main point of the stimulus.
However, with number 15, "The argument is structured to lead to the conclusion that", that shows it's a Main Point Question stem, because it doesn't discuss just some conclusion, but the prime conclusion that is the whole point of the argument. From the example above, "Joe's going to Paris tomorrow" is the conclusion, even though "There's a dude named Joe" is one inferrable "conclusion" of that stimulus, just as "There's a place called Paris" is an inferrable "conclusion" of that stimulus--just not the main point.
Hope this helps,
David