- Sat Aug 20, 2011 11:00 pm
#36627
Complete Question Explanation
Assumption. The correct answer choice is (B)
People who search the Internet for their medical information in many cases cannot tell the difference
between legitimate scientific information and “quackery.” A lot of the quackery, the author says,
is more appealing to laymen because it is often written in more broadly accessible language than
that you normally find in scientific journals. Therefore, the author asserts, those who count on the
web exclusively for their medical diagnoses are likely to do themselves more harm than good. The
new element that’s been introduced is the likelihood of doing themselves more harm than good; the
author asserts when people rely on Internet-based self-diagnoses, they are likely to do themselves
more harm than good, because they cannot tell what medical information is scientifically legitimate.
Answer choice (A): It is not necessary to the author’s conclusion that the typical Internet search
be for the sake of diagnoses, so this cannot be the correct answer to this Assumption question. To
confirm, we can apply the Assumption Negation technique, negating the answer choice to assess
whether taking away a given assumption is detrimental to the conclusion of the argument. Negating
this choice, we get the following:
People who browse the web typically do not do so in order to self diagnose. Since this negated
version does not hurt the author’s conclusion, it can be confidently eliminated from consideration.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice, because people who do rely on the Internet
for self diagnoses cannot tell what is scientifically legitimate and what isn’t, so unless people rely
exclusively on scientifically legitimate information (and don’t rely at all on anything other than
legitimate info), they are, according to the author, likely to do themselves more harm than good.
This is a tricky correct answer choice, because it does not mention quackery at all. This is still the
needed assumption however, because the hazard lay in the fact that people who rely on the Internet
cannot tell what information is scientifically legitimate and what isn’t.
Answer choice (C): The author merely says that the inability to distinguish valid information from
invalid will likely lead to more harm than good—the author does not guarantee that the ability to
distinguish the valid from the invalid will protect one from harm, so this is not an assumption on
which the argument relies.
Again, to confirm that it is incorrect, we can apply the Assumption Negation technique to the answer
choice, arriving at the following:
People who know enough to distinguish the valid information from the invalid might still do
themselves harm if they rely on the web when diagnosing their medical conditions.
Again, since this does not weaken the conclusion from the stimulus, it cannot be the right answer
choice.
Answer choice (D): This is a difficult wrong answer choice because of the way it is worded, but
basically it breaks down as follows: Many who search the internet assume that information has to
be clearly written to be scientifically valid. The author points out that many people prefer the nonscientific,
but clearly written, invalid information. This is not the same as assuming that people
equate clear writing with scientific validity.
Answer choice (E): This answer choice says that the only way people can possibly harm themselves
is by relying on quackery. This is a much more broad assumption than required by the author’s
argument, so it cannot be the right answer choice.
Assumption. The correct answer choice is (B)
People who search the Internet for their medical information in many cases cannot tell the difference
between legitimate scientific information and “quackery.” A lot of the quackery, the author says,
is more appealing to laymen because it is often written in more broadly accessible language than
that you normally find in scientific journals. Therefore, the author asserts, those who count on the
web exclusively for their medical diagnoses are likely to do themselves more harm than good. The
new element that’s been introduced is the likelihood of doing themselves more harm than good; the
author asserts when people rely on Internet-based self-diagnoses, they are likely to do themselves
more harm than good, because they cannot tell what medical information is scientifically legitimate.
Answer choice (A): It is not necessary to the author’s conclusion that the typical Internet search
be for the sake of diagnoses, so this cannot be the correct answer to this Assumption question. To
confirm, we can apply the Assumption Negation technique, negating the answer choice to assess
whether taking away a given assumption is detrimental to the conclusion of the argument. Negating
this choice, we get the following:
People who browse the web typically do not do so in order to self diagnose. Since this negated
version does not hurt the author’s conclusion, it can be confidently eliminated from consideration.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice, because people who do rely on the Internet
for self diagnoses cannot tell what is scientifically legitimate and what isn’t, so unless people rely
exclusively on scientifically legitimate information (and don’t rely at all on anything other than
legitimate info), they are, according to the author, likely to do themselves more harm than good.
This is a tricky correct answer choice, because it does not mention quackery at all. This is still the
needed assumption however, because the hazard lay in the fact that people who rely on the Internet
cannot tell what information is scientifically legitimate and what isn’t.
Answer choice (C): The author merely says that the inability to distinguish valid information from
invalid will likely lead to more harm than good—the author does not guarantee that the ability to
distinguish the valid from the invalid will protect one from harm, so this is not an assumption on
which the argument relies.
Again, to confirm that it is incorrect, we can apply the Assumption Negation technique to the answer
choice, arriving at the following:
People who know enough to distinguish the valid information from the invalid might still do
themselves harm if they rely on the web when diagnosing their medical conditions.
Again, since this does not weaken the conclusion from the stimulus, it cannot be the right answer
choice.
Answer choice (D): This is a difficult wrong answer choice because of the way it is worded, but
basically it breaks down as follows: Many who search the internet assume that information has to
be clearly written to be scientifically valid. The author points out that many people prefer the nonscientific,
but clearly written, invalid information. This is not the same as assuming that people
equate clear writing with scientific validity.
Answer choice (E): This answer choice says that the only way people can possibly harm themselves
is by relying on quackery. This is a much more broad assumption than required by the author’s
argument, so it cannot be the right answer choice.