- Fri Dec 20, 2019 10:42 am
#72655
Complete Question Explanation
Justify the Conclusion, SN. The correct answer choice is (E).
The argument in the stimulus contains a missing link, and the correct answer choice must supply that link in order to justify the conclusion. The conclusion is a conditional statement that if ad agencies target older adults with their advertisements, this will maximize their clients' profits. The basis for this conditional is a premise about older adults' level of personal disposable income: they have more of it than the rest of the population combined. The conclusion contains "new information," in the form of the reference to "maximizing clients' profits." We therefore need to bridge the gap between targeting a group that controls the level of disposable income controlled by older adults, and maximizing clients' profits. Put differently, we're missing information about whether targeting older adults with advertisements would actually cause them to spend enough money to maximize the ad agencies' clients' profits.
Answer choice (A): Without referring to the "new information" in the conclusion ("maximizing clients' profits"), an answer choice cannot justify the conclusion. Since answer choice A does not refer to maximizing client profits (even in a synonymous way), answer choice A cannot be the correct answer.
Answer choice (B): Answer choice B is the Mistaken Reversal of what we need to justify the conclusion. In other words, we do not want an extra premise that tells us targeting older adults is necessary for maximizing clients' profits, as answer choice B does (note the "unless"). Rather, we want an answer choice that tells us targeting such adults is sufficient for maximizing clients' profits (in which case, we would know our premises would be sufficient to prove the conclusion).
Answer choice (C): Answer choice C refers to the wrong targets of the advertisements ("wealthiest people"). In the argument, older people are not necessarily the wealthiest people (as individuals). Rather, they are the people who (as a group) control the most disposable personal income. Further, answer choice C refers to the wrong goal: "improve the reputation" of products, rather than the goal in the stimulus of maximizing profits. Put differently, answer choice C also fails for the same reason answer choice A failed (no reference to maximizing client profits).
Answer choice (D): Answer choice D is the Mistaken Negation of what we need to prove the conclusion. It says (rephrased) that if an advertising agency targets people who do NOT control as much disposable income, it will NOT maximize its clients' profits. Since a Mistaken Negation is never something we can infer with certainty, answer choice D cannot fully justify the conclusion.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. Answer choice E fixes the conditional mistakes made by answer choices B and D. It says that if an advertising agency does target people who do (as a group) control the most disposable income (i.e. the older adults referenced in the premises of the stimulus), then it will (necessarily) maximize its clients' profits. This is exactly the relationship we want in a conditional answer choice in Justify questions. We want the sufficient condition to fully match the premises of the stimulus (because then the premises will be sufficient, i.e. enough). We want the necessary condition to fully match the conclusion of the stimulus (because then the conclusion will be something that is certain, i.e. necessary).
Justify the Conclusion, SN. The correct answer choice is (E).
The argument in the stimulus contains a missing link, and the correct answer choice must supply that link in order to justify the conclusion. The conclusion is a conditional statement that if ad agencies target older adults with their advertisements, this will maximize their clients' profits. The basis for this conditional is a premise about older adults' level of personal disposable income: they have more of it than the rest of the population combined. The conclusion contains "new information," in the form of the reference to "maximizing clients' profits." We therefore need to bridge the gap between targeting a group that controls the level of disposable income controlled by older adults, and maximizing clients' profits. Put differently, we're missing information about whether targeting older adults with advertisements would actually cause them to spend enough money to maximize the ad agencies' clients' profits.
Answer choice (A): Without referring to the "new information" in the conclusion ("maximizing clients' profits"), an answer choice cannot justify the conclusion. Since answer choice A does not refer to maximizing client profits (even in a synonymous way), answer choice A cannot be the correct answer.
Answer choice (B): Answer choice B is the Mistaken Reversal of what we need to justify the conclusion. In other words, we do not want an extra premise that tells us targeting older adults is necessary for maximizing clients' profits, as answer choice B does (note the "unless"). Rather, we want an answer choice that tells us targeting such adults is sufficient for maximizing clients' profits (in which case, we would know our premises would be sufficient to prove the conclusion).
Answer choice (C): Answer choice C refers to the wrong targets of the advertisements ("wealthiest people"). In the argument, older people are not necessarily the wealthiest people (as individuals). Rather, they are the people who (as a group) control the most disposable personal income. Further, answer choice C refers to the wrong goal: "improve the reputation" of products, rather than the goal in the stimulus of maximizing profits. Put differently, answer choice C also fails for the same reason answer choice A failed (no reference to maximizing client profits).
Answer choice (D): Answer choice D is the Mistaken Negation of what we need to prove the conclusion. It says (rephrased) that if an advertising agency targets people who do NOT control as much disposable income, it will NOT maximize its clients' profits. Since a Mistaken Negation is never something we can infer with certainty, answer choice D cannot fully justify the conclusion.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. Answer choice E fixes the conditional mistakes made by answer choices B and D. It says that if an advertising agency does target people who do (as a group) control the most disposable income (i.e. the older adults referenced in the premises of the stimulus), then it will (necessarily) maximize its clients' profits. This is exactly the relationship we want in a conditional answer choice in Justify questions. We want the sufficient condition to fully match the premises of the stimulus (because then the premises will be sufficient, i.e. enough). We want the necessary condition to fully match the conclusion of the stimulus (because then the conclusion will be something that is certain, i.e. necessary).