- Fri Mar 24, 2017 2:10 pm
#33683
Complete Question Explanation
Must Be True—PR. The correct answer choice is (D)
This stimulus consists of a single principle, not an argument. In this Must Be True—Principle question, our task will be to find the answer choice containing a factual scenario that best reflects the application of that principle. To generate our prephrase, we have to break the principle down into easily testable pieces.
First, the principle applies when evaluating the appropriateness of a company executive’s compensation package. We are told that the compensation is likely, or probably, too high if it is “determined by advice of an external consultant” who “also has business interests with the company the executive manages.” This principle is concerned with a consultant currying favor with the executive in order to benefit in other business dealings with the company.
As mentioned above, this is a Must Be True—Principle question. Our job is the find the answer choice that best conforms to the principle. So, we need to look for a scenario with the following elements: 1) the conclusion that a company’s executive is probably overcompensated; based on 2) evidence that an external consultant was used to determine the compensation; and 3) that same consultant has other business interests with the company. An answer choice missing any of these three pieces will be incorrect. Only the correct answer choice will match all three elements.
Answer choice (A): We can eliminate this answer choice very quickly, because its conclusion is definitive rather than probabilistic: the president is “definitely overpaid.” Further, the evidence used to reach this conclusion is the comparison between the president’s pay and that of the company’s workers, rather than the use of a potentially biased external consultant to determine the compensation.
Answer choice (B): This answer choice is incorrect because it bases its conclusion on evidence that the president’s current compensation is based on old financial data that may no longer be relevant. There is no mention of an external consultant in this answer choice, just like the external consultant was absent from answer choice (A).
Answer choice (C): Here, the answer choice assumes that the reverse of the principle is true, that if a potentially biased external consultant is not used, then the executive is probably not overcompensated. However, the reverse of the principle is not necessarily true just because the principle, as stated, was true.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice because it matches all three elements from the stimulus. The probabilistic conclusion, that the president is “probably overpaid,” is based on evidence that the president’s compensation was determined following the advice of an external consultant who has other contracts with the president’s company.
Answer choice (E): In this case, the definitive conclusion—that the president is definitely not overpaid—is inconsistent with the probabilistic nature of the principle. Also, this answer choice has the same weakness as answer choice (C), i.e., treating the reverse of the principle as if it were also true.
Must Be True—PR. The correct answer choice is (D)
This stimulus consists of a single principle, not an argument. In this Must Be True—Principle question, our task will be to find the answer choice containing a factual scenario that best reflects the application of that principle. To generate our prephrase, we have to break the principle down into easily testable pieces.
First, the principle applies when evaluating the appropriateness of a company executive’s compensation package. We are told that the compensation is likely, or probably, too high if it is “determined by advice of an external consultant” who “also has business interests with the company the executive manages.” This principle is concerned with a consultant currying favor with the executive in order to benefit in other business dealings with the company.
As mentioned above, this is a Must Be True—Principle question. Our job is the find the answer choice that best conforms to the principle. So, we need to look for a scenario with the following elements: 1) the conclusion that a company’s executive is probably overcompensated; based on 2) evidence that an external consultant was used to determine the compensation; and 3) that same consultant has other business interests with the company. An answer choice missing any of these three pieces will be incorrect. Only the correct answer choice will match all three elements.
Answer choice (A): We can eliminate this answer choice very quickly, because its conclusion is definitive rather than probabilistic: the president is “definitely overpaid.” Further, the evidence used to reach this conclusion is the comparison between the president’s pay and that of the company’s workers, rather than the use of a potentially biased external consultant to determine the compensation.
Answer choice (B): This answer choice is incorrect because it bases its conclusion on evidence that the president’s current compensation is based on old financial data that may no longer be relevant. There is no mention of an external consultant in this answer choice, just like the external consultant was absent from answer choice (A).
Answer choice (C): Here, the answer choice assumes that the reverse of the principle is true, that if a potentially biased external consultant is not used, then the executive is probably not overcompensated. However, the reverse of the principle is not necessarily true just because the principle, as stated, was true.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice because it matches all three elements from the stimulus. The probabilistic conclusion, that the president is “probably overpaid,” is based on evidence that the president’s compensation was determined following the advice of an external consultant who has other contracts with the president’s company.
Answer choice (E): In this case, the definitive conclusion—that the president is definitely not overpaid—is inconsistent with the probabilistic nature of the principle. Also, this answer choice has the same weakness as answer choice (C), i.e., treating the reverse of the principle as if it were also true.