- Mon May 15, 2017 1:33 pm
#34862
Complete Question Explanation
Strengthen—PR. The correct answer choice is (C)
The museum curator discusses the detrimental effects of removing the grime from Michelangelo’s
frescoes: as critics have pointed out, this process of removing a layer of grime that has been present
for centuries exposes the artworks to acids that form in the air from pollution and water vapor.
In spite of the fact that the grime removal will expose the art to acids in the air, since the frescoes
cannot currently be seen as they looked in Michelangelo’s day, the curator asserts that the grime
removal should continue nonetheless. The argument can be broken down into its basic components
as follows:
Premise: Removal of centuries-old grime will expose Michelangelo’s frescoes to acids
that form in the air.
Counter-premise: However, without the restoration, the frescoes cannot be seen as they
originally appeared.
Conclusion: Thus, the restoration should continue.
The question that follows asks for the principle that strengthens the argument presented in the
stimulus. The correct answer choice will provide support for the assertion that the restoration should
continue.
Answer choice (A): The author’s conclusion is not based on greatness, it is based on the fact that
the frescoes in their present condition cannot be appreciated as they were originally created. Since
this choice does not help to justify the curator’s argument, it cannot be the correct answer to this
Strengthen question.
Answer choice (B): This choice provides that an artwork’s aesthetic value requires people to observe
and appreciate it. This is not applicable to this stimulus, because the author does not claim that the
frescoes are not being observed and appreciated. The point, rather, is that they are not able to be
observed in their original condition. This principle does not strengthen the curator’s argument, so it
should be ruled out of contention.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice. If, as this principle provides, future risk is
acceptable to allow a work of art to be appreciated in its original form, this strengthens the curators’
assertion that the restoration should continue despite the possibly detrimental exposure to the
elements.
Answer choice (D): The curator does not mention the price of the restoration, and the principle in
this answer choice does not reference the curator’s primary justification for the restoration: the fact
that the frescoes cannot currently be seen as they were originally created. Since this principle does
not strengthen the author’s argument, it cannot be the right answer to this Strengthen—PR question.
Answer choice (E): The curator is not concerned with the frescoes’ being regarded as the same
artwork; rather, the curator’s concern is that in their current condition, the frescoes cannot be seen as
they looked when they were created by the artist.
Strengthen—PR. The correct answer choice is (C)
The museum curator discusses the detrimental effects of removing the grime from Michelangelo’s
frescoes: as critics have pointed out, this process of removing a layer of grime that has been present
for centuries exposes the artworks to acids that form in the air from pollution and water vapor.
In spite of the fact that the grime removal will expose the art to acids in the air, since the frescoes
cannot currently be seen as they looked in Michelangelo’s day, the curator asserts that the grime
removal should continue nonetheless. The argument can be broken down into its basic components
as follows:
Premise: Removal of centuries-old grime will expose Michelangelo’s frescoes to acids
that form in the air.
Counter-premise: However, without the restoration, the frescoes cannot be seen as they
originally appeared.
Conclusion: Thus, the restoration should continue.
The question that follows asks for the principle that strengthens the argument presented in the
stimulus. The correct answer choice will provide support for the assertion that the restoration should
continue.
Answer choice (A): The author’s conclusion is not based on greatness, it is based on the fact that
the frescoes in their present condition cannot be appreciated as they were originally created. Since
this choice does not help to justify the curator’s argument, it cannot be the correct answer to this
Strengthen question.
Answer choice (B): This choice provides that an artwork’s aesthetic value requires people to observe
and appreciate it. This is not applicable to this stimulus, because the author does not claim that the
frescoes are not being observed and appreciated. The point, rather, is that they are not able to be
observed in their original condition. This principle does not strengthen the curator’s argument, so it
should be ruled out of contention.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice. If, as this principle provides, future risk is
acceptable to allow a work of art to be appreciated in its original form, this strengthens the curators’
assertion that the restoration should continue despite the possibly detrimental exposure to the
elements.
Answer choice (D): The curator does not mention the price of the restoration, and the principle in
this answer choice does not reference the curator’s primary justification for the restoration: the fact
that the frescoes cannot currently be seen as they were originally created. Since this principle does
not strengthen the author’s argument, it cannot be the right answer to this Strengthen—PR question.
Answer choice (E): The curator is not concerned with the frescoes’ being regarded as the same
artwork; rather, the curator’s concern is that in their current condition, the frescoes cannot be seen as
they looked when they were created by the artist.