- Mon Jul 11, 2016 12:46 pm
#26977
Complete Question Explanation
StrengthenX. The correct answer choice is (E)
The conclusion is presented at the end of this stimulus, and seems fairly reasonable: there is reason to question the financial magazine’s survey comparing North Americans’ concerns about personal finances to their concerns about politics. This conclusion is based on two premises, namely that questions in the survey seem clearly biased (the wording of the questions would influence the answers of those surveyed), and that the group participating in the survey (people who subscribe to a financial magazine) is self-selecting and thus unrepresentative of all North Americans. Since this is a Strengthen-Except question, the four incorrect answer choices will support the conclusion that there is reason to be skeptical about this survey.
Answer choice (A) strengthens the author’s conclusion by calling into question the financial magazine’s credibility, thus supporting the idea that its conclusions/findings are known to be suspect.
Answer choice (B) provides a similar, but broader, piece of information telling us that the conclusions of most magazine surveys turn out to be false, thereby supporting the author’s claim that we should be skeptical here.
Answer choice (C) strengthens the author’s assertion by providing conflicting evidence, in that other surveys indicate an opposite conclusion is true and hence give more reason to doubt the conclusion of the survey referenced in the stimulus.
Answer choice (D) touches on the author’s two principle criticisms—the biased questions and the self-selecting sample—by stating that there is reason to be skeptical about surveys that commit these errors.
Answer choice (E) is correct because it fails to strengthen the author’s conclusion. The fact that North Americans also find social issues important does not have any effect on the credibility of the survey or on the author’s conclusion. The stimulus discusses the relative importance of only two concerns—personal finances and politics—so this choice is completely irrelevant to the argument and is thus the correct answer.
StrengthenX. The correct answer choice is (E)
The conclusion is presented at the end of this stimulus, and seems fairly reasonable: there is reason to question the financial magazine’s survey comparing North Americans’ concerns about personal finances to their concerns about politics. This conclusion is based on two premises, namely that questions in the survey seem clearly biased (the wording of the questions would influence the answers of those surveyed), and that the group participating in the survey (people who subscribe to a financial magazine) is self-selecting and thus unrepresentative of all North Americans. Since this is a Strengthen-Except question, the four incorrect answer choices will support the conclusion that there is reason to be skeptical about this survey.
Answer choice (A) strengthens the author’s conclusion by calling into question the financial magazine’s credibility, thus supporting the idea that its conclusions/findings are known to be suspect.
Answer choice (B) provides a similar, but broader, piece of information telling us that the conclusions of most magazine surveys turn out to be false, thereby supporting the author’s claim that we should be skeptical here.
Answer choice (C) strengthens the author’s assertion by providing conflicting evidence, in that other surveys indicate an opposite conclusion is true and hence give more reason to doubt the conclusion of the survey referenced in the stimulus.
Answer choice (D) touches on the author’s two principle criticisms—the biased questions and the self-selecting sample—by stating that there is reason to be skeptical about surveys that commit these errors.
Answer choice (E) is correct because it fails to strengthen the author’s conclusion. The fact that North Americans also find social issues important does not have any effect on the credibility of the survey or on the author’s conclusion. The stimulus discusses the relative importance of only two concerns—personal finances and politics—so this choice is completely irrelevant to the argument and is thus the correct answer.