- Fri Jul 05, 2019 5:12 pm
#66196
@a19
The way you're writing about answer (C) sounds to me like you're applying the Assumption Negation Technique, which, if anything, proves that answer (C) is the correct answer. If, as you say, the "comparable series" only possessed sales of 0 "t-shirts and other memorabilia," then, indeed, the argument wouldn't stand. So, the author must be assuming that these "comparable series" are not so low as to disqualify them from "possessing popular appeal."
Now, you also seem to suggest that there is a "relativity flaw" here. I'm not exactly sure what you mean by that, @a19. However, I think what you're getting at is that the author is not very precise or specific about what amount of sales of "t-shirts and other memorabilia" would qualify a series as "possessing popular appeal." And you're right about that! The author never states anything specific about what quantitiy or number of "t-shirts and memorabilia" is the threshold for popularity. Therein lies the "gap." "Popular appeal" is the rogue term in the conclusion, and the right answer is that, even though it's a vague and unspecified unit of measurement, the author must be assuming that these "comparable series" do, in fact, have it. The takeaway here is to look for opinion phrases (or as my law professors like to call them, "terms of art") and spot them as gaps or rogue elements necessitating supporting assumptions.