- Fri Jan 21, 2011 12:00 am
#23608
Complete Question Explanation
Strengthen—PR. The correct answer choice is (A)
In this stimulus, the author argues that because you cannot know the intentions behind any given act, you cannot know whether that act was moral. Therefore, the author asserts, an action should be evaluated based on its consequences rather than its morality. The question stem requires that we locate the principle that will strengthen the author's argument.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice, saying, in basic terms, that if you wish to evaluate the morality of an action, you must know the intent behind it. If this principle is valid, that strengthens the authors assertion that you cannot know whether an act was moral. This is the basis of the author's conclusion that acts should be evaluated based on consequence rather than morality.
Answer choice (B): The author does not discuss assignment of praise or blame, so this principle would not strengthen the argument in the stimulus.
Answer choice (C): This choice is irrelevant to the stimulus, which deals with evaluations of other's actions ("One can never tell whether another person is acting…").
Answer choice (D): The author deals only with the proper method of evaluating actions, and is not concerned with the distinction between good and bad people, so this answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (E): The point of the stimulus is not that you need to know consequences to make moral judgments. The point is that consequence is a better basis for the evaluation of others' acts than morality.
Strengthen—PR. The correct answer choice is (A)
In this stimulus, the author argues that because you cannot know the intentions behind any given act, you cannot know whether that act was moral. Therefore, the author asserts, an action should be evaluated based on its consequences rather than its morality. The question stem requires that we locate the principle that will strengthen the author's argument.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice, saying, in basic terms, that if you wish to evaluate the morality of an action, you must know the intent behind it. If this principle is valid, that strengthens the authors assertion that you cannot know whether an act was moral. This is the basis of the author's conclusion that acts should be evaluated based on consequence rather than morality.
Answer choice (B): The author does not discuss assignment of praise or blame, so this principle would not strengthen the argument in the stimulus.
Answer choice (C): This choice is irrelevant to the stimulus, which deals with evaluations of other's actions ("One can never tell whether another person is acting…").
Answer choice (D): The author deals only with the proper method of evaluating actions, and is not concerned with the distinction between good and bad people, so this answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (E): The point of the stimulus is not that you need to know consequences to make moral judgments. The point is that consequence is a better basis for the evaluation of others' acts than morality.