- Fri May 06, 2016 9:03 am
#24018
Complete Question Explanation
Assumption. The correct answer choice is (D)
The first sentence of the stimulus is a premise supporting the second sentence, which is the conclusion. Based upon the premise that Hartley’s book contains numerous unattributed verbatim passages from an earlier work by Professor Johnson, the author of the stimulus concludes that Hartley owes an intellectual debt to Johnson and has been dishonest in not acknowledging that debt. The stimulus assumes that the first work published is in fact the originative source of the passages. Look for an answer that represents this assumption.
Answer Choice (A): The stimulus does not go so far as to suggest that Hartley would have been unable to write the book without the passages in question, only that utilizing them without acknowledgement was dishonest.
Answer Choice (B): The conclusion reached in the stimulus does not depend upon Hartley having had access to the manuscript of Lawrence’s book. For example, as Lawrence’s earlier work was in fact published, Hartley could feasibly have accessed the passages in question by means other than the manuscript itself in order to use them in the dishonest manner described in the stimulus.
Answer Choice (C): The stimulus does not suggest that a book on moral philosophy should contain only material representing the author’s own convictions, only that to include material representing the convictions of others without attribution is dishonest.
Answer Choice (D):This is the correct answer choice. For the conclusion in the stimulus to be properly drawn, it must be the case that Hartley was not the original source of the passages in question. If Lawrence did in fact originally obtain the ideas or formulations for the passages in question from Hartley, then it is Hartley who is the original source of these passages despite the fact that Lawrence was the first to publish them. That being the case, Hartley would not owe an intellectual debt to Lawrence.
Answer Choice (E): Whether or not Hartley considered the passages in question to be the best possible expressions of their ideas is irrelevant to the original argument. The argument asserts that Hartley dishonestly utilized the passages. Whether Hartley considered those passages to be the best possible expressions of the ideas, the worst, or somewhere in between does not change the dishonesty in failing to acknowledge their original source.
Assumption. The correct answer choice is (D)
The first sentence of the stimulus is a premise supporting the second sentence, which is the conclusion. Based upon the premise that Hartley’s book contains numerous unattributed verbatim passages from an earlier work by Professor Johnson, the author of the stimulus concludes that Hartley owes an intellectual debt to Johnson and has been dishonest in not acknowledging that debt. The stimulus assumes that the first work published is in fact the originative source of the passages. Look for an answer that represents this assumption.
Answer Choice (A): The stimulus does not go so far as to suggest that Hartley would have been unable to write the book without the passages in question, only that utilizing them without acknowledgement was dishonest.
Answer Choice (B): The conclusion reached in the stimulus does not depend upon Hartley having had access to the manuscript of Lawrence’s book. For example, as Lawrence’s earlier work was in fact published, Hartley could feasibly have accessed the passages in question by means other than the manuscript itself in order to use them in the dishonest manner described in the stimulus.
Answer Choice (C): The stimulus does not suggest that a book on moral philosophy should contain only material representing the author’s own convictions, only that to include material representing the convictions of others without attribution is dishonest.
Answer Choice (D):This is the correct answer choice. For the conclusion in the stimulus to be properly drawn, it must be the case that Hartley was not the original source of the passages in question. If Lawrence did in fact originally obtain the ideas or formulations for the passages in question from Hartley, then it is Hartley who is the original source of these passages despite the fact that Lawrence was the first to publish them. That being the case, Hartley would not owe an intellectual debt to Lawrence.
Answer Choice (E): Whether or not Hartley considered the passages in question to be the best possible expressions of their ideas is irrelevant to the original argument. The argument asserts that Hartley dishonestly utilized the passages. Whether Hartley considered those passages to be the best possible expressions of the ideas, the worst, or somewhere in between does not change the dishonesty in failing to acknowledge their original source.