- Mon Jan 09, 2023 2:59 pm
#98776
Hi Roppo,
This question is a Justify question.
The correct answer for a Justify question will, when added back into the argument, 100% prove the conclusion.
Basically, the correct answer + the premises = the conclusion.
Any answer that doesn't 100% prove the conclusion is wrong for Justify questions.
Often, Justify questions involve conditional reasoning, and the correct answer below is conditional.
The argument tells us the people in the experiment who gestured spoke more quickly and repeated themselves less. (Note that we do not know for certain that the gesturing caused the people to speak more quickly and repeat themselves less, only that these behaviors went together. This is what we call a correlation. It's helpful to recognize this as a correlation because that term appears in the correct answer.)
The conclusion is that gesturing helps speakers quickly find the phrases that they want.
We need an answer that 100% gets us from the premise to the conclusion, no ifs, ands, or buts.
A possible prephrase could be:
If something is correlated with speaking more quickly and repeating oneself less, then it helps speakers quickly find the phrases that they want.
That answer would get us from the premise to the conclusion.
Answer C does exactly this. The word "any" is a sufficient indicator, so the answer is basically saying "if a behavior is correlated with quicker speech and less repetition in speech, then it helps speakers find the phrases they want quickly."
Since we know that gesturing is correlated with quicker speech and less repetition in speech from the premises, then this answer gets us to the conclusion that gesturing helps speakers quickly find the phrases that they want.
None of the other answers does this and therefore those are wrong.
Be careful with Answer D. While it is also a conditional statement, it contains a Mistaken Reversal of what we need. We need the sufficient condition to match with the premises and the necessary condition to match with the conclusion so that we can go from the premises to conclusion and not the other way around.
In Answer D, the sufficient condition matches the conclusion which is not what we need. Also, we don't know for sure that the behavior (gesturing) enables people to speak more quickly, only that it is correlated with speaking more quickly, which brings us back to Answer C.