- Fri Jan 21, 2011 12:00 am
#22958
Complete Question Explanation
Assumption. The correct answer choice is (E)
This argument concludes that some nonconsensual medical research should be allowed because it sometimes is the only to way to gain knowledge of the best treatment for emergency conditions. This conclusion virtually disregards the principle advanced in the beginning of the stimulus — that the patient has a right to informed consent. Because the author did not reconcile this principle with his conclusion, you need prephrase a Defender Assumption that reconciles the two.
Given that there are two competing imperatives at stake — patient's rights to informed consent on one hand, benefits of medical research on the other — the author who concludes that nonconsensual research should sometimes be allowed must believe that second imperative is somehow more important than the first. This, in other words, is the central assumption in her argument.
Answer choice (A): Doctor's knowledge of what's best for their patients in emergency situations plays no role in this argument. This answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (B): At first, this seems like an attractive answer. Indeed, the reason why a doctor may choose to bypass obtaining a patient's consent to an experimental practice is probably due to fear that such knowledge can adversely affect the outcome of her research (for instance, if the patient refuses to give her consent). That said, the assumptions that underlie physicians' decisions are irrelevant to an argument in favor of nonconsensual medical research. This answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (C): This answer choice limits the application of the principle used by the author to defend her conclusion and therefore weakens the argument. It is incorrect.
Answer choice (D): Patients' rights in cases where the best treatment option is unknown are irrelevant to this conclusion. This answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. As discussed earlier, the author must believe that medical research is more important than the patient's right to informed consent. In other words, such rights must sometimes be outweighed by the benefits of this research. Try the Assumption Negation technique: what if the right of patients to informed consent is never outweighed by the benefits of medical research? If true, this would certainly weaken the author's conclusion. Therefore, answer choice (E) is correct.
Assumption. The correct answer choice is (E)
This argument concludes that some nonconsensual medical research should be allowed because it sometimes is the only to way to gain knowledge of the best treatment for emergency conditions. This conclusion virtually disregards the principle advanced in the beginning of the stimulus — that the patient has a right to informed consent. Because the author did not reconcile this principle with his conclusion, you need prephrase a Defender Assumption that reconciles the two.
Given that there are two competing imperatives at stake — patient's rights to informed consent on one hand, benefits of medical research on the other — the author who concludes that nonconsensual research should sometimes be allowed must believe that second imperative is somehow more important than the first. This, in other words, is the central assumption in her argument.
Answer choice (A): Doctor's knowledge of what's best for their patients in emergency situations plays no role in this argument. This answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (B): At first, this seems like an attractive answer. Indeed, the reason why a doctor may choose to bypass obtaining a patient's consent to an experimental practice is probably due to fear that such knowledge can adversely affect the outcome of her research (for instance, if the patient refuses to give her consent). That said, the assumptions that underlie physicians' decisions are irrelevant to an argument in favor of nonconsensual medical research. This answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (C): This answer choice limits the application of the principle used by the author to defend her conclusion and therefore weakens the argument. It is incorrect.
Answer choice (D): Patients' rights in cases where the best treatment option is unknown are irrelevant to this conclusion. This answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. As discussed earlier, the author must believe that medical research is more important than the patient's right to informed consent. In other words, such rights must sometimes be outweighed by the benefits of this research. Try the Assumption Negation technique: what if the right of patients to informed consent is never outweighed by the benefits of medical research? If true, this would certainly weaken the author's conclusion. Therefore, answer choice (E) is correct.