- Tue Aug 15, 2017 1:30 am
#38338
Happy to help, Jessica, but to an extent you have already answered the question of why the other answers are wrong. If you get why E is correct, then you know that it's the best answer, and since we are supposed to select the best answer, that's all you need to know to select it! The others don't have to be "wrong", they just have to be "not the best". Don't ever get hung up on why an answer is good or bad, right or wrong, but only on whether one answer is better than or worse than another.
That said, it's good to understand what the problems are with the other answer choices. Not understanding an answer might lead us to pick it out of confusion, so understanding, while optional, is better than not understanding. So, here goes!
We are asked to strengthen the argument, and that means we need to make the conclusion more likely to be true. The conclusion here is that a direct vote on issues would not be the right way to decide matters. The evidence is the claim that voting for officers is better, somehow making one's vote more likely to influence policy. So, we need an answer that adds some additional support for the claim that direct voting is not the right way.
Answer A does nothing to help that, as there is nothing in the stimulus about making any one vote count more than any other one vote. It's just irrelevant. Even if we interpret it to mean that having officers vote instead of direct voting is somehow giving those officers' votes extra weight, that would actually weaken the argument, suggesting that direct voting might be better after all.
Answer B is likewise irrelevant. What does fairness or outcome have anything to do with the argument? The argument is strictly about maximizing the value of your vote by selecting officers rather than voting directly, with that maximization apparently being better. Evaluating outcomes has nothing to do with which method is right.
Answer C might appear to strengthen the argument a little, but only if you offer it a little help. If important issues should be decided by those who can devote full time to them, does that mean it should be done by officers rather than by direct vote? Only if you assume that officers have that kind of time on their hands and non-officers don't. But don't assume anything that isn't given to you! Maybe officers are very busy people who cannot devote their full time to the issues, but non-officers might include a bunch of retired people with nothing but time on their hands? We just can't know from this stimulus that "devote their full time" means officers, so we can't pick this answer. Don't help the answers out - they need to stand or fall on their own.
Answer D gives no help to the "direct voting isn't right" argument, and might even weaken that claim by indicating that officers really can't exercise their own judgment all that much. We want to strengthen the idea that direct voting isn't right, and telling us that officers may have their hands a little bit tied does nothing to add to that.
That leaves our winner, answer E, which is the only one that tells us that maximizing influence is an important organizational goal. If that's true, and if direct voting doesn't accomplish that goal while another method does, then it supports the claim that direct voting is not the right way.
Hope that helps!
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
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