- Tue May 31, 2016 4:55 pm
#25824
Complete Question Explanation
Assumption. The correct answer choice is (B)
In this stimulus, the author concludes that the “happy life, in fact, tends to be the good life.” This
conclusion is heavily dependent on how the author defines these terms. The author defines genuine
happiness as “one’s sense of approval of one’s character and projects,” rather than as consisting of
pleasurable feelings. And the author defines “the good life” as a morally virtuous life rather than as a
life of material well-being.
However, there is a link missing in the author’s argument. The author concludes that the happy life
is the good life because the author equates “one’s sense of approval of one’s character and projects”
with a “morally virtuous life.” But the argument does not provide any support for treating those
concepts as being the same.
This is an Assumption question. Our prephrase is that the correct answer choice will tell us that a
morally virtuous life is connected to one in which a person has a sense of approval of the person’s
character and projects.
Answer choice (A): Although the author said that the “good life” is not defined as one of material
well-being, that position does not require that material well-being is incompatible with the good life.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice, because it ties together the previously
unlinked concepts of living a morally virtuous life and having a sense of approval of one’s character
and projects.
Answer choice (C): As with our discussion of answer choice (A), just because “genuine happiness”
does not consist in pleasurable feelings does not mean that viewing your own character and projects
with approval (i.e., living the good life), tends not to result in pleasurable feelings.
Answer choice (D): Remember that our job in an Assumption question is to find the answer choice
that contains information required for the conclusion to be valid. Here, the conclusion was that “the
happy life, in fact, tends to be the good life.” The goal of people who strive for material well-being is
irrelevant to that conclusion, not required for its validity.
Answer choice (E): This answer choice seems closer to something that the author may agree
with. However, it is not something required by the conclusion. Consider the answer choice using
the Assumption Negation Technique, by which we can test the answer choices in an Assumption
question. If this answer is required by the conclusion, then once it is negated it will attack the
conclusion. Here, we can negate this answer choice by saying that “material well-being does
increase one’s sense of approval of one’s character and projects.” This negation has no effect on the
conclusion, because it does not attack the notion that the good life is one in which a person has a
sense of approval of this or her character and projects.
Assumption. The correct answer choice is (B)
In this stimulus, the author concludes that the “happy life, in fact, tends to be the good life.” This
conclusion is heavily dependent on how the author defines these terms. The author defines genuine
happiness as “one’s sense of approval of one’s character and projects,” rather than as consisting of
pleasurable feelings. And the author defines “the good life” as a morally virtuous life rather than as a
life of material well-being.
However, there is a link missing in the author’s argument. The author concludes that the happy life
is the good life because the author equates “one’s sense of approval of one’s character and projects”
with a “morally virtuous life.” But the argument does not provide any support for treating those
concepts as being the same.
This is an Assumption question. Our prephrase is that the correct answer choice will tell us that a
morally virtuous life is connected to one in which a person has a sense of approval of the person’s
character and projects.
Answer choice (A): Although the author said that the “good life” is not defined as one of material
well-being, that position does not require that material well-being is incompatible with the good life.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice, because it ties together the previously
unlinked concepts of living a morally virtuous life and having a sense of approval of one’s character
and projects.
Answer choice (C): As with our discussion of answer choice (A), just because “genuine happiness”
does not consist in pleasurable feelings does not mean that viewing your own character and projects
with approval (i.e., living the good life), tends not to result in pleasurable feelings.
Answer choice (D): Remember that our job in an Assumption question is to find the answer choice
that contains information required for the conclusion to be valid. Here, the conclusion was that “the
happy life, in fact, tends to be the good life.” The goal of people who strive for material well-being is
irrelevant to that conclusion, not required for its validity.
Answer choice (E): This answer choice seems closer to something that the author may agree
with. However, it is not something required by the conclusion. Consider the answer choice using
the Assumption Negation Technique, by which we can test the answer choices in an Assumption
question. If this answer is required by the conclusion, then once it is negated it will attack the
conclusion. Here, we can negate this answer choice by saying that “material well-being does
increase one’s sense of approval of one’s character and projects.” This negation has no effect on the
conclusion, because it does not attack the notion that the good life is one in which a person has a
sense of approval of this or her character and projects.