- Mon Mar 07, 2016 12:00 am
#35648
Complete Question Explanation
Must Be True. The correct answer choice is (C)
As is typically the case for logical reasoning stimuli, this stimulus expects us to accept the premises
at face value. The premises here are that the person who abridged Hamlet did not possess a copy of
Hamlet and rendered the speeches of one character much more accurately than those of all of the
other characters. Any explanation or inference regarding the identity of the person who undertook
the abridgement should be drawn from both premises.
Answer choice (A): It is highly implausible that Shakespeare did not possess a copy of Hamlet or
that he would only be able to abridge the speeches of one character accurately. There is no support
for this inference.
Answer choice (B): It is unclear how not having a copy of Hamlet and having inaccurate renderings
of the speeches from all but one of the characters would simplify the stage production of the play.
Therefore, the two characteristics of this abridgement noted in the stimulus do not support this
inference.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice. This is the obvious implication of the
second premise, since the actor would be much more familiar with the speeches from his own
character than those from the other characters. Also, due to repeated rehearsals and performances, an
actor might know the play well enough to attempt an abridgement even without a copy of it. While
this is not the only possible inference from the stimulus, it is both consistent and plausible with the
premises above.
Answer choice (D): Unlike an actor, there is no reason to assume that a spectator would be
particularly familiar with the speeches of only one character. Also, it is unlikely that a spectator of a
singular performance of Hamlet would attempt even a slipshod abridgement.
Answer choice (E): It is probably easiest to find the flaws in this answer by comparing it to answer
choice (C). First, this answer only describes an actor without specifying that the actor played a role
in Hamlet. Thus, this provides no explanation for the accurate rendering of only one character’s
speeches. Second, while improving a play is certainly a plausible motive for abridging it, the
stimulus describes the abridgement as containing a slipshod handling of nearly all of the parts. If this
were the abridger’s intent, it seems to have been a failure. For both reasons, this answer should be
considered a Loser and rejected.
Must Be True. The correct answer choice is (C)
As is typically the case for logical reasoning stimuli, this stimulus expects us to accept the premises
at face value. The premises here are that the person who abridged Hamlet did not possess a copy of
Hamlet and rendered the speeches of one character much more accurately than those of all of the
other characters. Any explanation or inference regarding the identity of the person who undertook
the abridgement should be drawn from both premises.
Answer choice (A): It is highly implausible that Shakespeare did not possess a copy of Hamlet or
that he would only be able to abridge the speeches of one character accurately. There is no support
for this inference.
Answer choice (B): It is unclear how not having a copy of Hamlet and having inaccurate renderings
of the speeches from all but one of the characters would simplify the stage production of the play.
Therefore, the two characteristics of this abridgement noted in the stimulus do not support this
inference.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice. This is the obvious implication of the
second premise, since the actor would be much more familiar with the speeches from his own
character than those from the other characters. Also, due to repeated rehearsals and performances, an
actor might know the play well enough to attempt an abridgement even without a copy of it. While
this is not the only possible inference from the stimulus, it is both consistent and plausible with the
premises above.
Answer choice (D): Unlike an actor, there is no reason to assume that a spectator would be
particularly familiar with the speeches of only one character. Also, it is unlikely that a spectator of a
singular performance of Hamlet would attempt even a slipshod abridgement.
Answer choice (E): It is probably easiest to find the flaws in this answer by comparing it to answer
choice (C). First, this answer only describes an actor without specifying that the actor played a role
in Hamlet. Thus, this provides no explanation for the accurate rendering of only one character’s
speeches. Second, while improving a play is certainly a plausible motive for abridging it, the
stimulus describes the abridgement as containing a slipshod handling of nearly all of the parts. If this
were the abridger’s intent, it seems to have been a failure. For both reasons, this answer should be
considered a Loser and rejected.