- Wed Apr 10, 2019 2:34 pm
#64025
Hi hlee18!
As a Justify question, the stimulus is more likely than most to contain some form of conditional reasoning, and this particular example stays pretty true to form.
However, what is always the most important element in your method is to separate the relevant premise(s) from the conclusion, so that we can find the "gap" that will be 100% filled by the correct choice.
The entire argument really boils down to simply the last sentence, which contains both the main conclusion and the primary premise used by the author in support. The first half of the sentence contains the conclusion, and a good way to help decipher that breakdown is to be aware of the contextual clue of the finding the word 'since' behind the major divisive comma. Often, an entire argument can be found within one sentence, and the use of the words since, as, because and for directly behind that major comma help to signal that the first half of the sentence contains the conclusion, and the proposition following the comma presents the support. For example: The beach will be crowded today, since the weather is unnaturally warm for March.
In this case then, the argument is broken down as such:
Premise: most smokers rarely look at the packaging before smoking
_______________________
Conclusion: the new law will not affect the smoking habits of most smokers
In a sense, we have a situation exactly like this:
A
_______
B
Which means that the 'missing link' that would justify the argument would be (A --> B).
That 'bridging the gap' strategy (or Mechanistic Approach) here leads us to prephrase that the equivalent missing piece for the argument at hand would be:
(rarely look at packaging before smoking --> not affect smoking habits)
The correct choice of D presents exactly that idea, especially when you use the term unless to mean "if not," which is always a handy mechanism to diagram the tricky words of unless, until, without and except. Using that 'if not' translation, answer choice D says: if you don't frequently check the packaging before smoking, this new packaging cannot affect smoking habits.
That idea fills the gap in perfectly, which is why D is the correct response.
The incorrect answer of B is essentially a Mistaken Negation of the correct answer, which is a tricky but common trap in Justify answer choices.
This got lengthier than I anticipated but I hope it was helpful! Please let me know if you need any further clarification and I am here and happy to help however I can!
-Jay