- Sat Apr 09, 2016 1:41 pm
#22939
Complete Question Explanation
Assumption. The correct answer choice is (D)
The critic highlights the tension (or, perhaps, hypocrisy?) between people's high value on respect for others, and their appreciation for disrespectful comedians. The critic explains this tension by saying that disrespectful comedians highlight and exaggerate regular people's failure to exercise respect for others, and this portrayal makes people laugh (thus producing "successful comedy.")
Answer choice (A): This answer choice would greatly weaken the author's argument, by showing that the fans of disrespectful comedians are not the population (people who place a high value on respect for others) whom the author speculates about. This cannot be the correct answer choice.
Answer choice (B): The author merely said that exaggeration of disrespect "often" forms the basis of successful comedy. The author never said that such exaggeration is the only basis of successful comedy. So if other bases for successful comedy exist, this would not undermine the author's argument.
Answer choice (C): Try assuming the logical negation of this answer choice: What if few people disapprove of the portrayal of disrespect in comedy acts? This would not disprove the author's argument; indeed, it would strengthen the author's argument by showing that disrespectful comedians are successful. The statement as actually written in the answer choice tends to weaken, not strengthen, the author's argument.
Answer choice (D): This is the best correct answer choice. Try assuming the logical negation of this answer choice: What if people who value an ideal especially highly do always succeed in living up to their ideal? In this case, there would be no "failings" for comedians to exaggerate, and thus there would be no basis for successful comedy, as described by the author. So the statement in this answer choice is necessary to make the argument work.
Answer choice (E): The stimulus made no reference to dynamic changes in popularity of comedians over time.
Assumption. The correct answer choice is (D)
The critic highlights the tension (or, perhaps, hypocrisy?) between people's high value on respect for others, and their appreciation for disrespectful comedians. The critic explains this tension by saying that disrespectful comedians highlight and exaggerate regular people's failure to exercise respect for others, and this portrayal makes people laugh (thus producing "successful comedy.")
Answer choice (A): This answer choice would greatly weaken the author's argument, by showing that the fans of disrespectful comedians are not the population (people who place a high value on respect for others) whom the author speculates about. This cannot be the correct answer choice.
Answer choice (B): The author merely said that exaggeration of disrespect "often" forms the basis of successful comedy. The author never said that such exaggeration is the only basis of successful comedy. So if other bases for successful comedy exist, this would not undermine the author's argument.
Answer choice (C): Try assuming the logical negation of this answer choice: What if few people disapprove of the portrayal of disrespect in comedy acts? This would not disprove the author's argument; indeed, it would strengthen the author's argument by showing that disrespectful comedians are successful. The statement as actually written in the answer choice tends to weaken, not strengthen, the author's argument.
Answer choice (D): This is the best correct answer choice. Try assuming the logical negation of this answer choice: What if people who value an ideal especially highly do always succeed in living up to their ideal? In this case, there would be no "failings" for comedians to exaggerate, and thus there would be no basis for successful comedy, as described by the author. So the statement in this answer choice is necessary to make the argument work.
Answer choice (E): The stimulus made no reference to dynamic changes in popularity of comedians over time.