- Sat Jun 03, 2017 11:37 am
#35657
Complete Question Explanation
Justify the Conclusion. The correct answer choice is (A)
Once you’ve finished reading the stimulus and determined that this is Justify question, you should
attempt to solve it mechanistically. Although not all Justify can be solved in this manner, it is easy
to apply and often successful. Solving mechanistically entails looking for elements that are present
in a premise but not the conclusion, or vice versa (elements that appear in both are already justified).
The premises here have two elements: artistic criticism and pleasure. The conclusion also contains
two elements: artistic criticism and merit. Referring to criticism is justified since it can be traced
back to the premises, but merit does not appear until the conclusion (note that pleasure and merit
may be related but are clearly not synonymous). Furthermore, the argument disregards pleasure in
the conclusion. Therefore, the simplest way to justify this argument is appropriately connect the
premise-only element (pleasure) with the conclusion-only element (merit). A mechanistic answer
choice will do exactly this.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice. Here we see both merit and pleasure, and
we are told that merit depends upon pleasure. Since artistic criticism influences pleasure and merit
depends upon pleasure, this answer justifies that conclusion that merit also depends upon criticism.
Answer choice (B): Adding this answer to the stimulus does not justify the author’s conclusion. It
is unclear how individual, non-critical evaluations of art relates to criticism, pleasure, or merit, and
therefore unclear how this answer would allow the conclusion to be properly drawn.
Answer choice (C): While this is plausible and even consistent with the stimulus, being able to
understand artistic merit is not equivalent to influencing it. The argument suggests that critics not
only know what merit is, but that they can also change it.
Answer choice (D): This answer shows a mechanism by which criticism might be inferred to affect
an individual’s pleasure in an artwork. Reading criticism before viewing an artwork could certainly
have an influence on how the artwork is interpreted. However, this answer does nothing to establish
the connection between the amount of pleasure derived from an artwork and the merit it possesses.
Without such a connection, the conclusion remains unjustified.
Answer choice (E): This answer states an implicit premise of the preceding answer. If this is true,
then it is easier to understand how artistic criticism and the pleasure people take in viewing artwork
are related, but it is still unclear how either of those relate to the merit of an artwork.
Justify the Conclusion. The correct answer choice is (A)
Once you’ve finished reading the stimulus and determined that this is Justify question, you should
attempt to solve it mechanistically. Although not all Justify can be solved in this manner, it is easy
to apply and often successful. Solving mechanistically entails looking for elements that are present
in a premise but not the conclusion, or vice versa (elements that appear in both are already justified).
The premises here have two elements: artistic criticism and pleasure. The conclusion also contains
two elements: artistic criticism and merit. Referring to criticism is justified since it can be traced
back to the premises, but merit does not appear until the conclusion (note that pleasure and merit
may be related but are clearly not synonymous). Furthermore, the argument disregards pleasure in
the conclusion. Therefore, the simplest way to justify this argument is appropriately connect the
premise-only element (pleasure) with the conclusion-only element (merit). A mechanistic answer
choice will do exactly this.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice. Here we see both merit and pleasure, and
we are told that merit depends upon pleasure. Since artistic criticism influences pleasure and merit
depends upon pleasure, this answer justifies that conclusion that merit also depends upon criticism.
Answer choice (B): Adding this answer to the stimulus does not justify the author’s conclusion. It
is unclear how individual, non-critical evaluations of art relates to criticism, pleasure, or merit, and
therefore unclear how this answer would allow the conclusion to be properly drawn.
Answer choice (C): While this is plausible and even consistent with the stimulus, being able to
understand artistic merit is not equivalent to influencing it. The argument suggests that critics not
only know what merit is, but that they can also change it.
Answer choice (D): This answer shows a mechanism by which criticism might be inferred to affect
an individual’s pleasure in an artwork. Reading criticism before viewing an artwork could certainly
have an influence on how the artwork is interpreted. However, this answer does nothing to establish
the connection between the amount of pleasure derived from an artwork and the merit it possesses.
Without such a connection, the conclusion remains unjustified.
Answer choice (E): This answer states an implicit premise of the preceding answer. If this is true,
then it is easier to understand how artistic criticism and the pleasure people take in viewing artwork
are related, but it is still unclear how either of those relate to the merit of an artwork.