- Wed Sep 18, 2019 6:33 pm
#68254
Hi Naminyar,
As standardized test-takers, we are taught to beware of answers that include words like "all" or "none." But the test-makers know that and sometimes include these words in the correct answer. For that reason, notice these words, test whether they are too strong, but do not have a knee-jerk reaction that any answer with "all" in it must be wrong. And actually, in this particular question, the correct answer choice reads "some or all," which really just means "not none" anyway.
Reading the stimulus, there is a logical gap between treating employees fairly and using them as a means to one's own ends.
The two ideas don't necessarily relate, so the assumption needs to connect them. Look for answer choices that connect the concepts of fair employers and "means to an end." No choices mention fairness, but that's okay because more than one assumption may be required for an argument to be valid. B, C, and E mention the "means to an end" idea, so we should consider those first.
Since this is an assumption question, we can use the assumption negation technique.
When we negate B, we get "some employers who act morally use their employees as a means to their own ends." Does this statement attack the conclusion?
The conclusion is that "using others as a means to one’s own ends is not always morally reprehensible or harmful to others."
The negation of B supports, rather than attacks the conclusion, so B cannot be the correct answer.
Next, try C. When we negate C, we get "no employers use their employees as a means to their own ends." This attacks the argument because it takes away any connection between the premise and the conclusion. This looks like our answer, but let's try E just to make sure.
The negation of E reads: "It is possible to harm someone else without treating that person as a means to one’s own ends." This does not attack the conclusion at all--the argument is concerned with whether using others as a means to one's own ends is harmful, not whether it's the only way to harm someone.
This was definitely a tricky one! Good luck with your studying!