- Tue Jan 20, 2009 12:00 am
#73669
Complete Question Explanation
Main Point, Fill in the Blank. The correct answer choice is (B).
The author tells us with absolute certainty that a nation cannot have moral rights or responsibilities, but that a nation cannot survive unless many of its citizens attribute to it those intangible ideas. Citizens have to think and act as if their nation does have moral rights or responsibilities, or else that nation is doomed to failure. The nation cannot have those things, but many people have to believe they do have those things. Quite the conundrum!
To complete the argument and fill in the blank, we need to draw a conclusion that is based on those statements. We classify this as a Main Point question because we are trying to discern the author's intended conclusion, but it may help to think of it like a Must Be True question since we are using the facts in the stimulus - the author's premises - to prove the correct answer. This is the case with many Fill In the Blank questions.
Answer choice (A): This answer actually contradicts the argument. The author says those beliefs about the nation having moral rights are required, while this answer says something else must replace them.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. The conundrum is clearly stated here - the author has provided evidence that supports the claim that in order to survive, a nation's citizens must believe something that is not possible. It is "literally false" that a nation has moral rights and responsibilities, but we must believe that they do.
Answer choice (C): There is no information in the stimulus about praise or blame, and nothing to suggest that a nation cannot be the target of these things. Perhaps a nation should not be a target, since a nation cannot have moral responsibilities, but that doesn't mean that it cannot be such a target. Perhaps people with literally false beliefs will blame a nation for its perceived moral failings?
Answer choice (D): There is nothing in the stimulus that would support any claim about what a nation is or is not worth.
Answer choice (E): The argument does not deal with whether a nation should be thought of in one way or another. It is only about the fact that it cannot have moral rights and responsibilities, and that it must be (falsely) thought to have them if it is to survive. There is no "should" about it!
Main Point, Fill in the Blank. The correct answer choice is (B).
The author tells us with absolute certainty that a nation cannot have moral rights or responsibilities, but that a nation cannot survive unless many of its citizens attribute to it those intangible ideas. Citizens have to think and act as if their nation does have moral rights or responsibilities, or else that nation is doomed to failure. The nation cannot have those things, but many people have to believe they do have those things. Quite the conundrum!
To complete the argument and fill in the blank, we need to draw a conclusion that is based on those statements. We classify this as a Main Point question because we are trying to discern the author's intended conclusion, but it may help to think of it like a Must Be True question since we are using the facts in the stimulus - the author's premises - to prove the correct answer. This is the case with many Fill In the Blank questions.
Answer choice (A): This answer actually contradicts the argument. The author says those beliefs about the nation having moral rights are required, while this answer says something else must replace them.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. The conundrum is clearly stated here - the author has provided evidence that supports the claim that in order to survive, a nation's citizens must believe something that is not possible. It is "literally false" that a nation has moral rights and responsibilities, but we must believe that they do.
Answer choice (C): There is no information in the stimulus about praise or blame, and nothing to suggest that a nation cannot be the target of these things. Perhaps a nation should not be a target, since a nation cannot have moral responsibilities, but that doesn't mean that it cannot be such a target. Perhaps people with literally false beliefs will blame a nation for its perceived moral failings?
Answer choice (D): There is nothing in the stimulus that would support any claim about what a nation is or is not worth.
Answer choice (E): The argument does not deal with whether a nation should be thought of in one way or another. It is only about the fact that it cannot have moral rights and responsibilities, and that it must be (falsely) thought to have them if it is to survive. There is no "should" about it!