- Fri Jan 21, 2011 12:00 am
#22782
Complete Question Explanation
Must Be True-SN. The correct answer choice is (E)
The editorial presented in the stimulus contains a number of premises, but does not contain a conclusion. This is a common question format for Must Be True questions, and the correct answer choice is often (but not always) the conclusion that follows naturally from the premises.
There are two premises here, one in each sentence of the stimulus. The first ties the universities’ moral and intellectual responsibilities to the bestselling publications in their bookstores. It is in “If . . . Then” format, which makes picking the sufficient and necessary conditions easy. We can diagram the premise as follows:
(1)
(3)
Answer Choice (B) does not fall out from the stimulus: while it may be true that it is irresponsibility to carry these publications, the stimulus does not address it.
Answer Choice (C) makes a simple by mistaking the fact that there are more of those two magazines sold than any others with the idea that there are more sold than all others. There may be hundreds of magazines that each sell one copy and these two only sell two copies. In this case, they would be bestsellers, but would still account for a small portion of sales.
Answer Choice (D), like (A), confuse the individual’s responsibilities with the universities’.
Answer Choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. The stimulus says they’re not living up to at least one of their responsibilities, not that they’re failing to live up to both of them. So, either the universities are not living up to their moral responsibilities, intellectual responsibilities, or they are living up to neither. This is Answer Choice (E).
Must Be True-SN. The correct answer choice is (E)
The editorial presented in the stimulus contains a number of premises, but does not contain a conclusion. This is a common question format for Must Be True questions, and the correct answer choice is often (but not always) the conclusion that follows naturally from the premises.
There are two premises here, one in each sentence of the stimulus. The first ties the universities’ moral and intellectual responsibilities to the bestselling publications in their bookstores. It is in “If . . . Then” format, which makes picking the sufficient and necessary conditions easy. We can diagram the premise as follows:
(1)
- Living up to Moral
AND Frivolous Bestsellers
Living up to Intellectual
- (2) Frivolous Bestsellers
(3)
- Living up to Moral
Frivolous Best sellers OR
Living up to Intellectual
- (4) Living up to Moral OR Living up to Intellectual
Answer Choice (B) does not fall out from the stimulus: while it may be true that it is irresponsibility to carry these publications, the stimulus does not address it.
Answer Choice (C) makes a simple by mistaking the fact that there are more of those two magazines sold than any others with the idea that there are more sold than all others. There may be hundreds of magazines that each sell one copy and these two only sell two copies. In this case, they would be bestsellers, but would still account for a small portion of sales.
Answer Choice (D), like (A), confuse the individual’s responsibilities with the universities’.
Answer Choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. The stimulus says they’re not living up to at least one of their responsibilities, not that they’re failing to live up to both of them. So, either the universities are not living up to their moral responsibilities, intellectual responsibilities, or they are living up to neither. This is Answer Choice (E).