- Mon Aug 28, 2023 2:21 pm
#102959
Hi ihenson,
This is a Justify question, which is asking you to find the answer that, when added to the premises in the argument, will 100% prove the conclusion.
The first step in solving a Justify question is identifying the conclusion in the argument that we are trying to prove and seeing if there is any "new" information in that conclusion. In other words, are there any words/concepts discussed in the conclusion that weren't discussed in the premises? If so, there is a logical "gap" in the argument, and the correct answer must bridge that gap by linking the "new" information in the conclusion to the information in the premises.
In this argument, the conclusion states that "it is imprudent to appear prudent." The term "imprudent" is new information that hasn't been discussed in the premises and must be appear in the correct answer. How can we 100% prove that something is imprudent without linking that term to the premises?
Also, while the word "prudent" was not literally used in the premises, "appear prudent" matches the meaning of the expression in the premise about "perceived as forming opinions of others only after cautiously gathering and weighing the evidence," so this term has already been addressed in a premise.
Answer A lacks the missing term "imprudent" and adding this answer to the argument does not prove our conclusion that
"it is imprudent to appear prudent." Answer A just states that people who act spontaneously are well liked, but that doesn't mean that it is imprudent (meaning unwise) to appear prudent.
Since the premise basically states that appearing prudent causes people to resent you, we're looking for an answer that links imprudence to causing people to resent you, which Answer E does.