- PowerScore Staff
- Posts: 1079
- Joined: Jun 26, 2013
- Wed Nov 20, 2013 6:03 pm
#12679
Hi RENG!
One thing to remember with assumption questions is that anytime an author makes an argument, he or she is making multiple assumptions. In an Assumption question, you are only being asked to find one of those assumptions. So you're right that there may be several flaws with an argument based on the different assumptions the author is making. But the answer to an Assumption question just needs to identify one of those assumptions--it doesn't have to completely "fix" the argument.
Answer choice (D) is one of the assumptions of this argument. If we use the Assumption Negation technique to negate (D), it would read something like "there would not be an increase in employment if more people survived." This would directly attack the author's claim that saving lives would results in more earnings and more taxes for country X. If more people survived serious injuries but the number of jobs stayed the same, there wouldn't be more earnings and the country would face higher unemployment rates.
Answer choice (D) certainly doesn't fix the argument (as you pointed out, there could be a problem if it costs more to save people than they can earn later) but Assumption questions are not supposed to add something to make the argument 100% solid. As long as the answer choice is something necessary for the argument and if you negate the answer choice it attacks the argument, that's your correct answer.
Hope this helps!
Best,
Kelsey
One thing to remember with assumption questions is that anytime an author makes an argument, he or she is making multiple assumptions. In an Assumption question, you are only being asked to find one of those assumptions. So you're right that there may be several flaws with an argument based on the different assumptions the author is making. But the answer to an Assumption question just needs to identify one of those assumptions--it doesn't have to completely "fix" the argument.
Answer choice (D) is one of the assumptions of this argument. If we use the Assumption Negation technique to negate (D), it would read something like "there would not be an increase in employment if more people survived." This would directly attack the author's claim that saving lives would results in more earnings and more taxes for country X. If more people survived serious injuries but the number of jobs stayed the same, there wouldn't be more earnings and the country would face higher unemployment rates.
Answer choice (D) certainly doesn't fix the argument (as you pointed out, there could be a problem if it costs more to save people than they can earn later) but Assumption questions are not supposed to add something to make the argument 100% solid. As long as the answer choice is something necessary for the argument and if you negate the answer choice it attacks the argument, that's your correct answer.
Hope this helps!
Best,
Kelsey