- Fri Jan 21, 2011 12:00 am
#23674
Complete Question Explanation
Assumption. The correct answer choice is (D)
The argument in the stimulus is that since half of the applicants accepted into the club were women (and still are we presume), that is proof there was no discrimination against qualified women applicants.
The argument is unconvincing because it assumes that only about 50% of the most qualified applicants were women. If women actually composed a greater proportion of the highly qualified applicants, then even a "class" that is 50% women could represent discrimination.
You are asked to identify a necessary assumption, so you should focus on the statistical assumption in which the argument engages.
Answer choice (A): It is not necessary to know whether there were many qualified applicants; it is only necessary to know whether the qualified applicants were about half-and-half men and women.
Answer choice (B): This choice may have seemed attractive, but it is incorrect because we only need information about the applicants who were qualified to enter the club. Information about the town as a whole is totally unnecessary, so this choice is wrong. Furthermore, it is possible that 50% of the town, and 50% of the applicants could be women, while women still compose 90% of the qualified applicants, so this choice is not really even helpful.
Answer choice (C): This information is similarly unnecessary. The proportions of men and women in the town are not even helpful, because you cannot be sure whether they indicate the proportions of qualified applicants.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. For this argument to be internally sound, you absolutely must assume that no more than half of the qualified applicants were women. If more than half of the qualified applicants were women, you could not be certain that discrimination occurred, because it is perhaps necessary that the club has equal numbers of men and women for staging purposes; however, the argument that anything is proven would be false.
Answer choice (E): The source of the decision is not necessarily relevant to whether the decision was biased, so this response is incorrect.
Assumption. The correct answer choice is (D)
The argument in the stimulus is that since half of the applicants accepted into the club were women (and still are we presume), that is proof there was no discrimination against qualified women applicants.
The argument is unconvincing because it assumes that only about 50% of the most qualified applicants were women. If women actually composed a greater proportion of the highly qualified applicants, then even a "class" that is 50% women could represent discrimination.
You are asked to identify a necessary assumption, so you should focus on the statistical assumption in which the argument engages.
Answer choice (A): It is not necessary to know whether there were many qualified applicants; it is only necessary to know whether the qualified applicants were about half-and-half men and women.
Answer choice (B): This choice may have seemed attractive, but it is incorrect because we only need information about the applicants who were qualified to enter the club. Information about the town as a whole is totally unnecessary, so this choice is wrong. Furthermore, it is possible that 50% of the town, and 50% of the applicants could be women, while women still compose 90% of the qualified applicants, so this choice is not really even helpful.
Answer choice (C): This information is similarly unnecessary. The proportions of men and women in the town are not even helpful, because you cannot be sure whether they indicate the proportions of qualified applicants.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. For this argument to be internally sound, you absolutely must assume that no more than half of the qualified applicants were women. If more than half of the qualified applicants were women, you could not be certain that discrimination occurred, because it is perhaps necessary that the club has equal numbers of men and women for staging purposes; however, the argument that anything is proven would be false.
Answer choice (E): The source of the decision is not necessarily relevant to whether the decision was biased, so this response is incorrect.