- Mon Jan 20, 2014 12:00 am
#35296
Complete Question Explanation
Justify the Conclusion. The correct answer choice is (E)
This is a challenging question, in part because the author used none of the usual premise or conclusion indicators to help us determine the structure of the argument. Nevertheless, you should realize that the second sentence supports the first, because it explains why Pluto should not be regarded as a true planet. The stimulus, when reworded, is structured as follows:
Answer choice (A): This answer choice would be correct if we had evidence that Pluto were a moon. We do not. Although Pluto was a moon when it formed an orbit around the planet Neptune, it has since left Neptune’s orbit and we have no reason to believe that it is orbiting any planet today.
Answer choice (B): This answer choice does not prove the conclusion; instead, it is proven by it. If Pluto has an atmosphere but is not a true planet, then clearly not all celestial bodies that have an atmosphere are true planets. To answer a Justify question correctly, we need to establish that the conclusion is true, not assume that it is true.
Answer choice (C): A savvy test taker would eliminate this answer choice immediately, because it presents a speculation that cannot possibly prove the conclusion. The circumstances under which Pluto would have remained a moon have no bearing on whether or not it is a true planet today.
Answer choice (D): Our job is to establish the relevant criteria for determining what constitutes a true planet, not reject criteria that are irrelevant to it. Like incorrect answer choice (B), this answer choice answers a Must Be True rather than a Justify question. Indeed, if Pluto is not a true planet despite being much larger than any asteroid, then clearly the size of a celestial body is not (always) relevant to determining whether or not it is a true planet. Rather than helping to prove the conclusion, this answer choice – just like answer choice (B) – assumes that the conclusion is true.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice, because it introduces a criterion in the definition of a true planet that Pluto cannot possibly meet. If true planets must have formed in orbit around the sun exclusively, and Pluto clearly formed in orbit around Neptune instead, then Pluto cannot be a true planet (by the contrapositive):
Justify the Conclusion. The correct answer choice is (E)
This is a challenging question, in part because the author used none of the usual premise or conclusion indicators to help us determine the structure of the argument. Nevertheless, you should realize that the second sentence supports the first, because it explains why Pluto should not be regarded as a true planet. The stimulus, when reworded, is structured as follows:
- Premise: Pluto formed in orbit around Neptune, and was later ejected from it.
Conclusion: Pluto is not a true planet.
- Premises + Answer choice = Conclusion
Answer choice (A): This answer choice would be correct if we had evidence that Pluto were a moon. We do not. Although Pluto was a moon when it formed an orbit around the planet Neptune, it has since left Neptune’s orbit and we have no reason to believe that it is orbiting any planet today.
Answer choice (B): This answer choice does not prove the conclusion; instead, it is proven by it. If Pluto has an atmosphere but is not a true planet, then clearly not all celestial bodies that have an atmosphere are true planets. To answer a Justify question correctly, we need to establish that the conclusion is true, not assume that it is true.
Answer choice (C): A savvy test taker would eliminate this answer choice immediately, because it presents a speculation that cannot possibly prove the conclusion. The circumstances under which Pluto would have remained a moon have no bearing on whether or not it is a true planet today.
Answer choice (D): Our job is to establish the relevant criteria for determining what constitutes a true planet, not reject criteria that are irrelevant to it. Like incorrect answer choice (B), this answer choice answers a Must Be True rather than a Justify question. Indeed, if Pluto is not a true planet despite being much larger than any asteroid, then clearly the size of a celestial body is not (always) relevant to determining whether or not it is a true planet. Rather than helping to prove the conclusion, this answer choice – just like answer choice (B) – assumes that the conclusion is true.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice, because it introduces a criterion in the definition of a true planet that Pluto cannot possibly meet. If true planets must have formed in orbit around the sun exclusively, and Pluto clearly formed in orbit around Neptune instead, then Pluto cannot be a true planet (by the contrapositive):
- Premise: Pluto Formed in orbit around Neptune
Justify Formula: True planet Formed in orbit exclusively around the sun
Conclusion: Pluto True planet