- Mon Apr 17, 2017 2:39 pm
#34149
Hi,
I wavered between A and B and ultimately chose B, but when I negate answer choice A, it seems to weaken the argument: If we say "Whatever does not have a chemical explanation cannot have a purely psychological one" (I'm not actually sure if this is the correct negation. Should I also remove "not"?), it seems this statement would undermine the argument, which says because humans have free will/produce voluntary behavior, their sexual behavior cannot be chemically controlled and, instead, must be psychologically controlled. Or would the answer still be wrong based on the word "purely"? I'm not sure that stating that "psychological factors take over" implies these factors are the only ones affecting sexual behavior.
Also, If I understand correctly from the response above, answer A is incorrect because it casts too wide a net (fills logical gap over 100%) in stating "whatever" as opposed to the specific subject presented in the stimulus. If we substituted "whatever does" for "voluntary behaviors that do" in answer choice A, would it be an assumption required by the argument? I assume it wouldn't because this is a required assumption question, an answer choice that fills the gap 100% or more is sufficient, but not required, and therefore wrong. A required assumption answer, however, can be a subset of the gap.
Essentially is there another reason why A is wrong?
Thank you.