- Sun Jan 20, 2013 12:00 am
#25680
Complete Question Explanation
Strengthen—PR, CE. The correct answer choice is (C)
The doctor’s argument begins with the conclusion, that “it is wrong for medical researchers to keep their research confidential.” As support for this conclusion, the doctor points out that when researchers do not share their research, it is possible that effective medical treatments will be delayed, and that humans may suffer unnecessarily as a result.
To conclude that keeping research confidential is wrong, the doctor must be applying some normative rule. The stimulus does not give us the rule being applied, and so the argument is flawed.
The question stem identifies this as a Strengthen—Principle question, which asks us to select the answer choice containing the rule applied by the doctor to reach the conclusion. The doctor disapproves of keeping research confidential because doing so could delay effective medical treatments and possibly cause unnecessary human suffering. So, our prephrase, the rule being applied by the doctor, could be stated this way: an act is wrong if it could delay effective medical treatments and cause unnecessary human suffering.
Before we move to the answer choices, you may be wondering why we have not done anything with the second half of the first sentence, “even if the companies for which they work would rather that they do so.” This comment was merely an aside by the doctor, addressing the pressures that induce medical researchers to keep their research confidential. It does not tell us why the doctor thinks the act of not sharing medical research is wrong. So, for our prephrase, we need only take note of the aside, and be on guard to avoid an answer choice that tries to lure us in that direction.
Answer choice (A): Although this answer choice provides a rule, it is a rule that controls a different set of circumstances than what we saw in the stimulus. The doctor’s concern was the possibility of human suffering. This rule would apply if the researchers knew, for certain, that their actions would result in human suffering.
Answer choice (B): To reach the conclusion that it is “wrong” for medical researchers to keep their research confidential, we need a rule that applies to the facts provided in the stimulus. The stimulus does not tell us that preventing human suffering is the most important moral principal, so this answer choice has no impact on the conclusion.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice, because it provides explicitly the rule used by the doctor to reach the conclusion. We know from the stimulus that there is the chance that keeping the research confidential would cause unnecessary human suffering. So, while it is not certain, there is the chance that sharing the research could prevent unnecessary human suffering. Therefore, this conditional rule applies to the stimulus, requiring that medical researchers not keep their research confidential.
Answer choice (D): This answer choice is irrelevant, because it deals with developing research instead of disclosing research results.
Answer choice (E): This choice is irrelevant too, because the conclusion had to do with the researchers’ moral obligations, rather than the companies’ obligations.
Strengthen—PR, CE. The correct answer choice is (C)
The doctor’s argument begins with the conclusion, that “it is wrong for medical researchers to keep their research confidential.” As support for this conclusion, the doctor points out that when researchers do not share their research, it is possible that effective medical treatments will be delayed, and that humans may suffer unnecessarily as a result.
To conclude that keeping research confidential is wrong, the doctor must be applying some normative rule. The stimulus does not give us the rule being applied, and so the argument is flawed.
The question stem identifies this as a Strengthen—Principle question, which asks us to select the answer choice containing the rule applied by the doctor to reach the conclusion. The doctor disapproves of keeping research confidential because doing so could delay effective medical treatments and possibly cause unnecessary human suffering. So, our prephrase, the rule being applied by the doctor, could be stated this way: an act is wrong if it could delay effective medical treatments and cause unnecessary human suffering.
Before we move to the answer choices, you may be wondering why we have not done anything with the second half of the first sentence, “even if the companies for which they work would rather that they do so.” This comment was merely an aside by the doctor, addressing the pressures that induce medical researchers to keep their research confidential. It does not tell us why the doctor thinks the act of not sharing medical research is wrong. So, for our prephrase, we need only take note of the aside, and be on guard to avoid an answer choice that tries to lure us in that direction.
Answer choice (A): Although this answer choice provides a rule, it is a rule that controls a different set of circumstances than what we saw in the stimulus. The doctor’s concern was the possibility of human suffering. This rule would apply if the researchers knew, for certain, that their actions would result in human suffering.
Answer choice (B): To reach the conclusion that it is “wrong” for medical researchers to keep their research confidential, we need a rule that applies to the facts provided in the stimulus. The stimulus does not tell us that preventing human suffering is the most important moral principal, so this answer choice has no impact on the conclusion.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice, because it provides explicitly the rule used by the doctor to reach the conclusion. We know from the stimulus that there is the chance that keeping the research confidential would cause unnecessary human suffering. So, while it is not certain, there is the chance that sharing the research could prevent unnecessary human suffering. Therefore, this conditional rule applies to the stimulus, requiring that medical researchers not keep their research confidential.
Answer choice (D): This answer choice is irrelevant, because it deals with developing research instead of disclosing research results.
Answer choice (E): This choice is irrelevant too, because the conclusion had to do with the researchers’ moral obligations, rather than the companies’ obligations.