- Thu Jan 21, 2016 12:00 am
#72939
Complete Question Explanation
Justify the Conclusion SN. The correct answer choice is (E).
The author establishes in the premise that the Sals people had furnaces for smelting, tools of smelted cooper and bronze, and distinct words for copper and bronze, but that they had no distinct word for iron. From this information, the author concludes that the Sals did not smelt iron.
When we are looking to Justify the Conclusion of an argument, we are looking for a way to guarantee the truth of the conclusion, and frequently that means we want to show that the premises we have already been given are sufficient to prove it. That means the correct answer will create a conditional link, wherein the premises are the sufficient condition and the conclusion is the necessary condition. (See Dave's explanation below in this thread for more on how to approach such questions). Here, that means we need an answer in which "they had no word for iron" is sufficient to prove "they didn't smelt iron." More broadly, we'd like an answer that says either "If you don't have a word for something, you don't do that thing" or the contrapositive, which would be "if you do something, you have a word for that thing."
Answer choice (A): Here we are given a Mistaken Negation or Mistaken Reversal of our prephrase (depending on which version of the prephrase you are focused on) - tricky! We don't want having the word to be sufficient for doing the thing; we want doing the thing to be sufficient for having the word!
Answer choice (B): The issue is not whether the Sals were familiar or unfamiliar with iron, but whether they smelted it.
Answer choice (C): This answer simply repeats information we already have about the Sals, and tells us nothing about iron, only about other metals.
Answer choice (D): Another answer that tries to confuse us with the concept of familiarity, when what we want to know is whether they did the thing in question. This answer also makes no link to having or not having a distinct word for something.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. A perfect match for our prephrase! If you did the thing, you had a distinct word for it, and since the Sals had no such distinct word this would prove the conclusion that they did not do that thing. Winner!
Justify the Conclusion SN. The correct answer choice is (E).
The author establishes in the premise that the Sals people had furnaces for smelting, tools of smelted cooper and bronze, and distinct words for copper and bronze, but that they had no distinct word for iron. From this information, the author concludes that the Sals did not smelt iron.
When we are looking to Justify the Conclusion of an argument, we are looking for a way to guarantee the truth of the conclusion, and frequently that means we want to show that the premises we have already been given are sufficient to prove it. That means the correct answer will create a conditional link, wherein the premises are the sufficient condition and the conclusion is the necessary condition. (See Dave's explanation below in this thread for more on how to approach such questions). Here, that means we need an answer in which "they had no word for iron" is sufficient to prove "they didn't smelt iron." More broadly, we'd like an answer that says either "If you don't have a word for something, you don't do that thing" or the contrapositive, which would be "if you do something, you have a word for that thing."
Answer choice (A): Here we are given a Mistaken Negation or Mistaken Reversal of our prephrase (depending on which version of the prephrase you are focused on) - tricky! We don't want having the word to be sufficient for doing the thing; we want doing the thing to be sufficient for having the word!
Answer choice (B): The issue is not whether the Sals were familiar or unfamiliar with iron, but whether they smelted it.
Answer choice (C): This answer simply repeats information we already have about the Sals, and tells us nothing about iron, only about other metals.
Answer choice (D): Another answer that tries to confuse us with the concept of familiarity, when what we want to know is whether they did the thing in question. This answer also makes no link to having or not having a distinct word for something.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. A perfect match for our prephrase! If you did the thing, you had a distinct word for it, and since the Sals had no such distinct word this would prove the conclusion that they did not do that thing. Winner!