- Tue May 04, 2010 6:53 pm
#34551
Complete Question Explanation
Assumption, CE. The correct answer choice is (E).
The author concludes that some people wear tinted glasses because they have a tendency to be depressed or to be hypochondriacs. This is based on positive correlation between wearing such glasses and being prone to such psychological conditions. The reader should recognize that this conclusion is causal - the psychological condition is what causes the patient to wear the tinted glasses - and immediately consider the standard causal assumptions:
1. There is no alternate cause
2. When the cause occurs, the effect occurs
3. When the cause is absent, the effect is absent
4. The two phenomena are not reversed
5. The data on which the argument relied was valid
In this case, we could be looking for an answer that indicates the studies described in the second sentence were valid (supporting the data). We might find an answer that says there is not some third phenomenon that causes both depression/hypochondria and vision issues that require tinted glasses (a genetic condition, perhaps, or a disease, which could be an alternate cause for this correlation). Or we might want an answer that indicates that wearing the glasses is not actually a cause of depression or hypochondria (eliminating a reversed causal relationship).
Answer choice (A): The argument is not about the cause of depression, but about what depression causes. Thus, it doesn't matter what causes depression, as long as that cause isn't also directly causing the patient to wear tinted glasses.
Answer choice (B): It is irrelevant what the wearers think the glasses are doing. They can be completely aware that depression is causing them to wear them, or completely oblivious to the cause. The author need not assume anything about what the wearers think.
Answer choice (C): As with answer A, the argument is not about what causes depression, but whether depression causes some patients to wear tinted glasses.
Answer choice (D): Similar to answer B, the author does not need to make any assumptions about what the wearer is thinking or trying to accomplish by wearing the glasses. While this answer might strengthen the argument, it is not a necessary assumption of the argument.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. This answer eliminates the possibility of a reversed cause and effect: the glasses are not the cause of depression in these patients. The negation of this answer would indicate that wearing tinted glasses is a cause of depression, rather than an effect of it, and that would seriously undermine the argument.
Assumption, CE. The correct answer choice is (E).
The author concludes that some people wear tinted glasses because they have a tendency to be depressed or to be hypochondriacs. This is based on positive correlation between wearing such glasses and being prone to such psychological conditions. The reader should recognize that this conclusion is causal - the psychological condition is what causes the patient to wear the tinted glasses - and immediately consider the standard causal assumptions:
1. There is no alternate cause
2. When the cause occurs, the effect occurs
3. When the cause is absent, the effect is absent
4. The two phenomena are not reversed
5. The data on which the argument relied was valid
In this case, we could be looking for an answer that indicates the studies described in the second sentence were valid (supporting the data). We might find an answer that says there is not some third phenomenon that causes both depression/hypochondria and vision issues that require tinted glasses (a genetic condition, perhaps, or a disease, which could be an alternate cause for this correlation). Or we might want an answer that indicates that wearing the glasses is not actually a cause of depression or hypochondria (eliminating a reversed causal relationship).
Answer choice (A): The argument is not about the cause of depression, but about what depression causes. Thus, it doesn't matter what causes depression, as long as that cause isn't also directly causing the patient to wear tinted glasses.
Answer choice (B): It is irrelevant what the wearers think the glasses are doing. They can be completely aware that depression is causing them to wear them, or completely oblivious to the cause. The author need not assume anything about what the wearers think.
Answer choice (C): As with answer A, the argument is not about what causes depression, but whether depression causes some patients to wear tinted glasses.
Answer choice (D): Similar to answer B, the author does not need to make any assumptions about what the wearer is thinking or trying to accomplish by wearing the glasses. While this answer might strengthen the argument, it is not a necessary assumption of the argument.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. This answer eliminates the possibility of a reversed cause and effect: the glasses are not the cause of depression in these patients. The negation of this answer would indicate that wearing tinted glasses is a cause of depression, rather than an effect of it, and that would seriously undermine the argument.