- Sat Jan 21, 2012 12:00 am
#63994
This stimulus presents the relationship between the rate of societal change and the degree to which
young people value the advice of their elders. If societal change is slow, there is greater respect for
the advice of elders, and, conversely, if societal change is more rapid, young people see less value in
the advice of their elders. Based on these premises, the author jumps to the conclusion that the rate
of societal change is reflected in the amount of deference (i.e. respect) which younger members of
society show to older members.
Although it is somewhat subtle, we might note the leap from valuing the advice of elders, to showing
deference to elders:
Premises: Slow societal change greater value placed on elders’ advice
Rapid societal change lesser value placed on elders’ advice
Conclusion: Rate of societal change is reflected in the deference shown to elders.
The stimulus is followed by an assumption question stem. Since there is a clear leap from greater
value to greater deference, the correct answer choice will provide the Supporter Assumption which
links these elements (the choice which links greater perceived value with greater deference).
Answer choice (A): This stimulus is not about whether or not society’s young members can
determine the rate of societal change, but rather whether the amount of respect that the youth have
for their elders provides an accurate gauge of the societal rate of change. Since this choice fails to
provide the Supporter Assumption required for the author’s argument to be properly drawn, this
answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (B): This choice provides a clever wrong answer. We need to link deference with how
the young assess the value of their elders’ advice. This choice instead links deference with how much
actual value is provided by the elders. Because of this subtle but important distinction, this choice is
incorrect.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice; it is the one which links the rogue elements
as prephrased in our discussion above. If deference for elders and valuing of their advice vary
together, then this allows the argument in the stimulus to be properly drawn:
Slow societal change greater value placed on elders’ advice greater deference
Rapid societal change lesser value placed on elders’ advice lesser deference
Between the premises presented in the stimulus, and the Supporter Assumption provided by this
answer choice, the author’s argument (that degree of deference for elders provides an accurate gauge
of the societal change rate) is properly drawn.
Answer choice (D): This is another clever incorrect answer choice. The argument is that a faster
changing society leads the youth to assess elders’ advice as less relevant. This does not require
the assumption provided here, which is that the experience of the elders is less relevant in a faster
changing society.
Since this choice doesn’t even reference the degree of deference that the youth have for their elders,
it cannot link the needed elements from the stimulus and thus cannot be the Supporter Assumption
that we are looking for.
Answer choice (E): This choice links the value that young people place on the advice of elders with
the practical value that this advice holds for them. This does not provide the needed link between
young peoples valuation of elders’ advice and their degree of deference for elders, so this choice is
incorrect.
young people value the advice of their elders. If societal change is slow, there is greater respect for
the advice of elders, and, conversely, if societal change is more rapid, young people see less value in
the advice of their elders. Based on these premises, the author jumps to the conclusion that the rate
of societal change is reflected in the amount of deference (i.e. respect) which younger members of
society show to older members.
Although it is somewhat subtle, we might note the leap from valuing the advice of elders, to showing
deference to elders:
Premises: Slow societal change greater value placed on elders’ advice
Rapid societal change lesser value placed on elders’ advice
Conclusion: Rate of societal change is reflected in the deference shown to elders.
The stimulus is followed by an assumption question stem. Since there is a clear leap from greater
value to greater deference, the correct answer choice will provide the Supporter Assumption which
links these elements (the choice which links greater perceived value with greater deference).
Answer choice (A): This stimulus is not about whether or not society’s young members can
determine the rate of societal change, but rather whether the amount of respect that the youth have
for their elders provides an accurate gauge of the societal rate of change. Since this choice fails to
provide the Supporter Assumption required for the author’s argument to be properly drawn, this
answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (B): This choice provides a clever wrong answer. We need to link deference with how
the young assess the value of their elders’ advice. This choice instead links deference with how much
actual value is provided by the elders. Because of this subtle but important distinction, this choice is
incorrect.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice; it is the one which links the rogue elements
as prephrased in our discussion above. If deference for elders and valuing of their advice vary
together, then this allows the argument in the stimulus to be properly drawn:
Slow societal change greater value placed on elders’ advice greater deference
Rapid societal change lesser value placed on elders’ advice lesser deference
Between the premises presented in the stimulus, and the Supporter Assumption provided by this
answer choice, the author’s argument (that degree of deference for elders provides an accurate gauge
of the societal change rate) is properly drawn.
Answer choice (D): This is another clever incorrect answer choice. The argument is that a faster
changing society leads the youth to assess elders’ advice as less relevant. This does not require
the assumption provided here, which is that the experience of the elders is less relevant in a faster
changing society.
Since this choice doesn’t even reference the degree of deference that the youth have for their elders,
it cannot link the needed elements from the stimulus and thus cannot be the Supporter Assumption
that we are looking for.
Answer choice (E): This choice links the value that young people place on the advice of elders with
the practical value that this advice holds for them. This does not provide the needed link between
young peoples valuation of elders’ advice and their degree of deference for elders, so this choice is
incorrect.