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#22960
Complete Question Explanation

Assumption. The correct answer choice is (B)

Despite the soaring sales of classical records in Malsenia, the author suspects that Malsenians have no desire to hear live performances of classical music. Why? Because audiences at classical concerts are continually shrinking. The causal relationship can be summarized as follows:
  • ..... ..... Cause ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... ..... Effect

    No desire to hear live performances .......... Shrinking audiences at concerts
When the cause for a given effect is given in the conclusion of the argument, you should attack the stimulus by considering alternate causes for that effect. For instance, it is perfectly possible that the shrinking audiences at classical concerts are due to the exorbitant cost of concert tickets rather than the lack of desire to hear live performances.

Because we are dealing with an Assumption question given in the context of a fairly weak cause-and-effect argument, it pays off to prephrase a Defender Assumption that protects the argument from alternate causes. For instance, if the author has the proper explanation for the given effect, she must assume that concert tickets are not so expensive as to deter audiences from attending. If they were, her argument would be seriously weakened, as this would suggest a plausible alternate cause.

Answer choice (A): There is no reason why classical records must include pieces familiar from television, despite the fact that TV is the reason why people were attracted to classical music in the first place. Even if no familiar pieces were included in the classical record, the author's explanation for the shrinking audiences at classical concerts still holds. This answer choice is incorrect.

Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. If the reason why audiences at classical concerts are shrinking is simply people's lack of desire to hear them, then at least some Malsenians must have the option of attending the concerts if they wanted to. If nobody did (due to cost considerations, for instance), this would easily explain why the audiences are shrinking and weaken the argument. Because the logical opposite of Answer choice (B) weakens the argument, this answer choice states an assumption necessary for the argument to be true.

Answer choice (C): Even if the number of classical concerts had decreased in response to smaller audiences, this would not explain why the audiences had shrunk in the first place: it only explains why there would be limited future opportunities to see classical concerts. Because the logical opposite of answer choice (C) does not provide a plausible alternate cause for the given effect, this answer choice is incorrect.

Answer choice (D): Whether the classical records available in Malsenia are recordings of actual public concerts or not is immaterial to the conclusion of the argument, which is about why audiences at live concerts are shrinking.

Answer choice (E): Even if classical concerts in Malsenia are limited to music that is readily available on recordings, this would not weaken the causal relationship in the stimulus. This answer choice is incorrect.
 ykim435
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#19529
The explanations on the student forum says that the stimulus contains a causal relationship. I am having difficulty finding this causal relationship from the stimulus. Which phrase/part of the stimulus hints at the causal relationship?

Thanks in advance!
 Emily Haney-Caron
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#19537
Hi ykim,

Good question! The language here is pretty subtle, but the idea is that audiences at classical concerts are shrinking because Malsenian converts to classical music are more comfortable with recorded music. Does that help?
 adlindsey
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#31158
I had this question between B and D. I went with the latter, because, the conclusion stated, "have no desire to hear live performances." So, I dismissed B, since it talked about availability to attend. Why would this matter if they have no desire?
D sounded like a stronger option, since the recordings weren't of actual public concerts. Wouldn't using the negation technique, classical records available are, for the most part, recordings of actual public concerts, destroy the argument?
 David Boyle
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#31264
adlindsey wrote:I had this question between B and D. I went with the latter, because, the conclusion stated, "have no desire to hear live performances." So, I dismissed B, since it talked about availability to attend. Why would this matter if they have no desire?
D sounded like a stronger option, since the recordings weren't of actual public concerts. Wouldn't using the negation technique, classical records available are, for the most part, recordings of actual public concerts, destroy the argument?

Hello adlindsey,

Answer D is kind of a bait-and-switch; just because something is a "recording of an actual public concert", that doesn't mean it is a live public concert itself! Attending a live concert is different from hearing a recording of one.
As for "have no desire to hear live performances", being able to make conclusions about someone's desire, presupposes that people are even able to attend a live performance in the first place. But if they aren't able to, for whatever reason, then you can't assume they don't want to go to a live performance--maybe they just aren't able to go!!

Hope this helps,
David

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