- Wed Aug 30, 2017 2:09 pm
#38998
Remember that assumptions are things that the author did not say but MUST have believed, tanushreebansal. While they do bring up new information in the sense that they give us something the author did not say, and thus they are in the same family of questions as strengthen and justify the conclusion, they are also things that must be true if the argument is good. That's why the Assumption Negation TechniqueTM works so well - if the correct answer has to be true, then making it a false statement should do serious damage to the argument. Here's an example in action:
I asked Reese Witherspoon to join me for a romantic, candlelit dinner tonight, so tonight she and I will be dining together by candlelight.
What did I assume? Among other things, I assumed that she accepted my invitation. How do you know that I assumed that? Try negating it: Reese did not accept my invitation. What does that do to my claim that she and I will be dining together this evening? Ruins it! That's how you know that I assumed she said yes.
What happens when you negate a wrong answer? Let's say another answer choice to my fantasy dinner scenario was "Reese finds me attractive". When we negate that, we get "Reese does not find me attractive". Hard to imagine such a thing - surely she will fall in love with me on sight - but what if that was so? Might she still go to dinner with me tonight? Sure! Maybe out of pity, or curiosity, or because my wit and charm were so overpowering despite how hideous she may find me to be. Maybe she wants a role in my next feature film. Maybe she lost a bet. Not finding me attractive does nothing to weaken the conclusion that she will join me for dinner, and so that statement - she finds me attractive - is NOT an assumption of the argument.
Now, try that approach on each of your contenders. Let's look at E, the one you ended up selecting, and negate it (which means make it into a false statement): "The national unemployment rate did increase following the increase in the minimum wage." Does that destroy the argument about minimum wage jobs? Not at all! The overall unemployment rate could increase even while minimum wage jobs hold steady or even increase. This negation of answer E doesn't hurt the argument, so it is not the correct answer.
Negate D this way: "The fast-food restaurants included in the study increased the average wage paid to employees." Does this wreck the argument? If anything, it helps it! If the minimum wage went up, and fast-food restaurants increased their employees' pay, and they kept all or most folks on the payroll, that would help the argument that the economists are wrong. This negation has the opposite effect of what we were looking for, and so it is not the correct answer. The negation needs to wreck the argument, not help it or be neutral.
Finally, negate answer B, like so: "Minimum-wage job availability at fast-food restaurants included in the study was not representative of minimum-wage job availability in general." This means that our author's only evidence that the economists are wrong is bad evidence - not being representative means these jobs are the exception rather than the rule. That means that the economists could be right after all, and perhaps minimum wage jobs in all other environments (other than those fast-food places) may have been cut back drastically. The argument is ruined! That's what we want to see when we try this technique on the correct answer to an Assumption question.
Give that a try on the next handful of Assumption questions you encounter and see how it goes. It's a great technique, very powerful and virtually foolproof once you get used to it. Good luck, keep up the good work!
p.s. If you know Reese, would you tell her I am free for dinner tonight? Or whenever she wants? Thanks.
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
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