- Wed Jan 20, 2010 12:00 am
#63982
Complete Question Explanation
Main Point—SN.. The correct answer choice is (B)
In this stimulus we are presented with several conditional statements:
In order to be an intriguing person, you must be able to inspire constant curiosity.
intriguing able to inspire perpetual curiosity
If you are constantly broadening your abilities and extending your intellectual reach, you will be able
to inspire that curiosity.
broadening ability and intellect able to inspire perpetual curiosity
The final sentence begins with the word “For,” which in this case is means “Because.” So, here the
author is actually presenting a premise: Constantly increasing your ability and intellect makes you
impossible to totally understand, and thus a constant mystery to others:
broadening ability and intellect constant mystery
Putting together the argument in retrospect: If you are constantly expanding, you are a constant
mystery, and thus you are able to inspire perpetual curiosity:
broadening ability and intellect constant mystery able to inspire curiosity
The question which follows is a Main Point question, and we can prephrase an answer based on
the discussion above: The author believes that a person who constantly increases his or her abilities
and intellect is impossible to understand, is therefore a constant mystery, and is thus able to inspire
perpetual curiosity.
We should note that even if one is able to inspire perpetual curiosity, we cannot assume that person
will be intriguing—this would reflect a mistaken negation of the first sentence (what we know is that
anyone who is intriguing can inspire such curiosity).
Answer choice (A): This choice, which restates the first sentence in the stimulus, can be diagrammed
as follows:
intriguing able to inspire perpetual curiosity
This does not express the conclusion of the argument, but rather the first premise presented, so this
answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice, and the one which restates the conclusion as
prephrased above:
broadening ability and intellect able to inspire curiosity
The author’s conclusion is that if one is constantly expanding in ability and intellect, then one can
remain mysterious, and this enables one to inspire perpetual curiosity in others.
Answer choice (C): This choice is a commonly chosen wrong answer, in part because it has
information presented in the last sentence of the stimulus, but like incorrect answer choice (A)
above, this is actually a supporting premise of the argument:
broadening ability and intellect constant mystery
This premise lacks the important component of the ability to inspire perpetual curiosity, so it cannot
represent the main conclusion of the argument.
Answer choice (D): This is another tricky wrong answer, mistaking a sufficient condition for a
necessary one, provides the following Mistaken Reversal:
able to inspire curiosity broaden ability and intellect
From the stimulus we know the reverse to be true: that if one can constantly broaden one’s abilities,
then one will be able to inspire perpetual curiosity.
Answer choice (E): This incorrect answer choice does not reflect the author’s conclusion, nor is it
even necessarily accurate according to the passage:
broadening ability and intellect always have curiosity
The author tells us that a person who constantly broadens his or her abilities and intellect is able to
inspire curiosity in others—not necessarily in his or her self.
Main Point—SN.. The correct answer choice is (B)
In this stimulus we are presented with several conditional statements:
In order to be an intriguing person, you must be able to inspire constant curiosity.
intriguing able to inspire perpetual curiosity
If you are constantly broadening your abilities and extending your intellectual reach, you will be able
to inspire that curiosity.
broadening ability and intellect able to inspire perpetual curiosity
The final sentence begins with the word “For,” which in this case is means “Because.” So, here the
author is actually presenting a premise: Constantly increasing your ability and intellect makes you
impossible to totally understand, and thus a constant mystery to others:
broadening ability and intellect constant mystery
Putting together the argument in retrospect: If you are constantly expanding, you are a constant
mystery, and thus you are able to inspire perpetual curiosity:
broadening ability and intellect constant mystery able to inspire curiosity
The question which follows is a Main Point question, and we can prephrase an answer based on
the discussion above: The author believes that a person who constantly increases his or her abilities
and intellect is impossible to understand, is therefore a constant mystery, and is thus able to inspire
perpetual curiosity.
We should note that even if one is able to inspire perpetual curiosity, we cannot assume that person
will be intriguing—this would reflect a mistaken negation of the first sentence (what we know is that
anyone who is intriguing can inspire such curiosity).
Answer choice (A): This choice, which restates the first sentence in the stimulus, can be diagrammed
as follows:
intriguing able to inspire perpetual curiosity
This does not express the conclusion of the argument, but rather the first premise presented, so this
answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice, and the one which restates the conclusion as
prephrased above:
broadening ability and intellect able to inspire curiosity
The author’s conclusion is that if one is constantly expanding in ability and intellect, then one can
remain mysterious, and this enables one to inspire perpetual curiosity in others.
Answer choice (C): This choice is a commonly chosen wrong answer, in part because it has
information presented in the last sentence of the stimulus, but like incorrect answer choice (A)
above, this is actually a supporting premise of the argument:
broadening ability and intellect constant mystery
This premise lacks the important component of the ability to inspire perpetual curiosity, so it cannot
represent the main conclusion of the argument.
Answer choice (D): This is another tricky wrong answer, mistaking a sufficient condition for a
necessary one, provides the following Mistaken Reversal:
able to inspire curiosity broaden ability and intellect
From the stimulus we know the reverse to be true: that if one can constantly broaden one’s abilities,
then one will be able to inspire perpetual curiosity.
Answer choice (E): This incorrect answer choice does not reflect the author’s conclusion, nor is it
even necessarily accurate according to the passage:
broadening ability and intellect always have curiosity
The author tells us that a person who constantly broadens his or her abilities and intellect is able to
inspire curiosity in others—not necessarily in his or her self.