- Fri Jan 21, 2011 12:00 am
#23217
Complete Question Explanation
Parallel Reasoning. The correct answer choice is (D)
In this parallel question, the novelist says he cannot give a summary because a summary cannot communicate what he wants to communicate. That communication can only occur through the form of the novel. This a great time to employ the abstraction trick. Basically he is saying, I cannot change the form of this information and still communicate the same thing. Also, be sure to employ the Double the Conclusions technique on the problem.
Answer choice (A): The conclusion of this answer choice is "So it can be considered a blueprint" which does not match the "cannot summarize and still communicate" conclusion of the stimulus. Also, this is an argument to define what something is, not an argument about changing it and still communicating the same information.
Answer choice (B): This choice is logically invalid (notice the new element introduced in the second premise) and again deals with defining something, not with the ability or inability to communicate.
Answer choice (C): Again, the answer is not a logical argument. You may be tempted because it is dealing with a type of summary (a travelog), but there is no argument about the difference in information between traveling and a travelog. Also, the conclusion does not match the conclusion of the stimulus.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. The conclusion of this answer choice doubles the stimulus' conclusion, and the reasoning matches our abstract idea. A photograph is a different form than a three-dimensional representation (just like a summary is a different form than a novel) and it cannot communicate the same experience (information).
Answer choice (E): The conclusion does not match the stimulus because it is dealing with two different aspects of a menu, not with the information it is able or not able to convey.
Parallel Reasoning. The correct answer choice is (D)
In this parallel question, the novelist says he cannot give a summary because a summary cannot communicate what he wants to communicate. That communication can only occur through the form of the novel. This a great time to employ the abstraction trick. Basically he is saying, I cannot change the form of this information and still communicate the same thing. Also, be sure to employ the Double the Conclusions technique on the problem.
Answer choice (A): The conclusion of this answer choice is "So it can be considered a blueprint" which does not match the "cannot summarize and still communicate" conclusion of the stimulus. Also, this is an argument to define what something is, not an argument about changing it and still communicating the same information.
Answer choice (B): This choice is logically invalid (notice the new element introduced in the second premise) and again deals with defining something, not with the ability or inability to communicate.
Answer choice (C): Again, the answer is not a logical argument. You may be tempted because it is dealing with a type of summary (a travelog), but there is no argument about the difference in information between traveling and a travelog. Also, the conclusion does not match the conclusion of the stimulus.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. The conclusion of this answer choice doubles the stimulus' conclusion, and the reasoning matches our abstract idea. A photograph is a different form than a three-dimensional representation (just like a summary is a different form than a novel) and it cannot communicate the same experience (information).
Answer choice (E): The conclusion does not match the stimulus because it is dealing with two different aspects of a menu, not with the information it is able or not able to convey.