- Fri Jan 21, 2011 12:00 am
#60948
Complete Question Explanation
Must Be True—SN. The correct answer choice is (D)
This stimulus provides some conditional reasoning, with the conclusion presented in the first sentence: The economy is doing badly. This is based on the premise that two indicators (real estate and car sales) are performing poorly.
R.E.Slump
and Bad Economy likely
Low Car Sales
And the contrapositive:
R.E.Slump
Bad Economy or
Low Car Sales
(Note that the author’s logic requires that both indicators perform poorly in order to draw the conclusion that the economy is probably doing badly).
Answer choice (A): This choice is incorrect, because it suggests that low car sales alone are sufficient to indicate a bad economy. The stimulus suggests that either low car sales or a real estate slump alone is consistent with a good economy, which means a slump in either variable alone would be insufficient to establish the likelihood of a bad economy.
Answer choice (B): This answer choice characterizes the Bad Economy as the sufficient variable, but claims that success in the real estate or car sales market is consistent with a good economy, not that success in those markets guarantee a good economy. This choice is a Mistaken Reversal of the author’s assertion that poor performance in real estate and car sales is likely to indicate a poor economy.
Answer choice (C): Poorly performing real estate or car sales performance is consistent with a good economy. This does not mean that a healthy economy is likely, only that it is possible, so this answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice, as it reflects the logic from the contrapositive diagrammed above: A healthy economy (“Bad Economy” from the diagram) means that at least one of the two variables (real estate & car sales) is not faltering, which rules out at the possibility that both indicators are performing poorly.
Answer choice (E): This answer choice provides another example of a Mistaken Reversal. The stimulus tells us that poor performance in both real estate and car sales is sufficient to conclude that a bad economy is likely, which is much different from claiming that these factors are the necessary variables if we actually know that the economy is doing badly.
Must Be True—SN. The correct answer choice is (D)
This stimulus provides some conditional reasoning, with the conclusion presented in the first sentence: The economy is doing badly. This is based on the premise that two indicators (real estate and car sales) are performing poorly.
R.E.Slump
and Bad Economy likely
Low Car Sales
And the contrapositive:
R.E.Slump
Bad Economy or
Low Car Sales
(Note that the author’s logic requires that both indicators perform poorly in order to draw the conclusion that the economy is probably doing badly).
Answer choice (A): This choice is incorrect, because it suggests that low car sales alone are sufficient to indicate a bad economy. The stimulus suggests that either low car sales or a real estate slump alone is consistent with a good economy, which means a slump in either variable alone would be insufficient to establish the likelihood of a bad economy.
Answer choice (B): This answer choice characterizes the Bad Economy as the sufficient variable, but claims that success in the real estate or car sales market is consistent with a good economy, not that success in those markets guarantee a good economy. This choice is a Mistaken Reversal of the author’s assertion that poor performance in real estate and car sales is likely to indicate a poor economy.
Answer choice (C): Poorly performing real estate or car sales performance is consistent with a good economy. This does not mean that a healthy economy is likely, only that it is possible, so this answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice, as it reflects the logic from the contrapositive diagrammed above: A healthy economy (“Bad Economy” from the diagram) means that at least one of the two variables (real estate & car sales) is not faltering, which rules out at the possibility that both indicators are performing poorly.
Answer choice (E): This answer choice provides another example of a Mistaken Reversal. The stimulus tells us that poor performance in both real estate and car sales is sufficient to conclude that a bad economy is likely, which is much different from claiming that these factors are the necessary variables if we actually know that the economy is doing badly.