- Mon May 02, 2016 1:30 pm
#23758
Complete Question Explanation
Justify the Conclusion—PR. The correct answer choice is (E)
This stimulus is horribly long, and you need to have a good approach to this type of question on test day. My approach to such a long stimulus is initially to focus on the argumentative portion rather than the informative portion, which in this case means the second half of the stimulus.
The second half argues that since dog breeders only seek to preserve traits specified by pedigree associations, other traits risk being lost. It concludes that pedigree organizations should set standards to preserve working ability in the working dog classification.
The question asks you to justify the conclusion with a principle, so you should look for support for the argumentative portion of the stimulus.
Answer choice (A): You can easily discard this choice, because the argument in the stimulus seemed to concern adding requirements, not replacing one requirement with another. This choice, however, is written as if the stimulus concerned a trade-off between characteristics. You could also eliminate this choice because it offers reason to not set a standard rather than support for a standard.
Answer choice (B): Since the argument in the stimulus concerned adding standards, not being certain to enforce existing standards, a principle requiring equal enforcement of a new standard does not prove that a new standard should be set. This response is incorrect.
Answer choice (C): Once again, this response concerns a responsibility to enforce a standard, but the argument in the stimulus concerned a responsibility to set a standard. This principle does not help, so this choice is wrong.
Answer choice (D): This choice is very attractive, but is incorrect. Since you cannot be sure that those dogs classified as working dogs will actually be put to such use, you cannot be sure that a principle demanding standards based on eventual use would prove that new standards should be set.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. The principle that standards should reflect the original purpose of products or activities would demand new standards reflecting working ability for dogs classified as working dogs. To 100% confirm this choice, review the rest of the stimulus. You will find that pedigree associations do not currently require that breeders preserve the work abilities of working dogs, which means that what you would presume is likely given the argumentative part of the stimulus is actually stated.
Justify the Conclusion—PR. The correct answer choice is (E)
This stimulus is horribly long, and you need to have a good approach to this type of question on test day. My approach to such a long stimulus is initially to focus on the argumentative portion rather than the informative portion, which in this case means the second half of the stimulus.
The second half argues that since dog breeders only seek to preserve traits specified by pedigree associations, other traits risk being lost. It concludes that pedigree organizations should set standards to preserve working ability in the working dog classification.
The question asks you to justify the conclusion with a principle, so you should look for support for the argumentative portion of the stimulus.
Answer choice (A): You can easily discard this choice, because the argument in the stimulus seemed to concern adding requirements, not replacing one requirement with another. This choice, however, is written as if the stimulus concerned a trade-off between characteristics. You could also eliminate this choice because it offers reason to not set a standard rather than support for a standard.
Answer choice (B): Since the argument in the stimulus concerned adding standards, not being certain to enforce existing standards, a principle requiring equal enforcement of a new standard does not prove that a new standard should be set. This response is incorrect.
Answer choice (C): Once again, this response concerns a responsibility to enforce a standard, but the argument in the stimulus concerned a responsibility to set a standard. This principle does not help, so this choice is wrong.
Answer choice (D): This choice is very attractive, but is incorrect. Since you cannot be sure that those dogs classified as working dogs will actually be put to such use, you cannot be sure that a principle demanding standards based on eventual use would prove that new standards should be set.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. The principle that standards should reflect the original purpose of products or activities would demand new standards reflecting working ability for dogs classified as working dogs. To 100% confirm this choice, review the rest of the stimulus. You will find that pedigree associations do not currently require that breeders preserve the work abilities of working dogs, which means that what you would presume is likely given the argumentative part of the stimulus is actually stated.