- Mon Nov 21, 2011 12:00 am
#25019
Complete Question Explanation
Justify the Conclusion—SN. The correct answer choice is (E)
This stimulus contains a practical argument: since it is difficult and expensive to acquire information regarding all the pros and cons of a particular product, it is rational not to acquire such information unless one expects the benefits to outweigh the costs. From this, the author concludes that consumers who do not acquire such information are behaving rationally.
The argument contains a conditional premise. By applying the Unless Equation, that premise can be diagramed as follows:
Answer choice (A): Although this answer choice is rather complex and contains some of the “keywords” we are looking for, its contrapositive would read, “Rational consumers who do acquire information usually do expect that the benefits of doing so would outweigh the costs.” This is almost a restatement of the author’s premise, and cannot help justify the conclusion.
Answer choice (B): This answer choice can be immediately eliminated, because it does not address the issue of whether or not consumers expect the benefits to outweigh the costs.
Answer choice (C): This is an attractive answer, because it establishes that the benefits of acquiring detailed information usually do not outweigh the costs—a statement that is relatively close to our initial prephrase. There are two reasons, however, why this answer choice is still incorrect: First, we are looking for a statement that addresses the consumers’ expectations of whether the benefits of acquiring detailed information would outweigh the costs. By contrast, answer choice (C) states a fact. You should not assume that consumers’ expectations are consistent with reality. Secondly, the word “usually” in this answer choice weakens the strength of the statement. We are looking for a definitive statement that justifies the conclusion, not a probabilistic statement describing what usually happens.
Answer choice (D): This is another attractive answer, because it establishes the consumer expectation that the benefits of acquiring information do not outweigh the costs. This is extremely close to our initial prephrase. Unfortunately, as with answer choice (C), the word “usually” weakens the strength of this statement. Given the definitive nature of the author’s conclusion, we need an affirmative statement that matches the author’s language and justifies the conclusion 100%, not a probabilistic statement describing what usually happens.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. Since the entire argument revolves around consumers who do not bother to acquire certain information, this answer choice addresses the right group of people. If they do not expect that the benefits of acquiring such information to outweigh the costs, it is reasonable to conclude that they are behaving rationally by not acquiring such information:
Justify the Conclusion—SN. The correct answer choice is (E)
This stimulus contains a practical argument: since it is difficult and expensive to acquire information regarding all the pros and cons of a particular product, it is rational not to acquire such information unless one expects the benefits to outweigh the costs. From this, the author concludes that consumers who do not acquire such information are behaving rationally.
The argument contains a conditional premise. By applying the Unless Equation, that premise can be diagramed as follows:
- Premise: Rational to acquire information Expect benefits to outweigh the costs
- Conclusion: Rational to acquire information
- Premise: Rational to acquire information Expect benefits to outweigh the costs
Justify: Expect benefits to outweigh costs
Conclusion: Rational to acquire information
Answer choice (A): Although this answer choice is rather complex and contains some of the “keywords” we are looking for, its contrapositive would read, “Rational consumers who do acquire information usually do expect that the benefits of doing so would outweigh the costs.” This is almost a restatement of the author’s premise, and cannot help justify the conclusion.
Answer choice (B): This answer choice can be immediately eliminated, because it does not address the issue of whether or not consumers expect the benefits to outweigh the costs.
Answer choice (C): This is an attractive answer, because it establishes that the benefits of acquiring detailed information usually do not outweigh the costs—a statement that is relatively close to our initial prephrase. There are two reasons, however, why this answer choice is still incorrect: First, we are looking for a statement that addresses the consumers’ expectations of whether the benefits of acquiring detailed information would outweigh the costs. By contrast, answer choice (C) states a fact. You should not assume that consumers’ expectations are consistent with reality. Secondly, the word “usually” in this answer choice weakens the strength of the statement. We are looking for a definitive statement that justifies the conclusion, not a probabilistic statement describing what usually happens.
Answer choice (D): This is another attractive answer, because it establishes the consumer expectation that the benefits of acquiring information do not outweigh the costs. This is extremely close to our initial prephrase. Unfortunately, as with answer choice (C), the word “usually” weakens the strength of this statement. Given the definitive nature of the author’s conclusion, we need an affirmative statement that matches the author’s language and justifies the conclusion 100%, not a probabilistic statement describing what usually happens.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. Since the entire argument revolves around consumers who do not bother to acquire certain information, this answer choice addresses the right group of people. If they do not expect that the benefits of acquiring such information to outweigh the costs, it is reasonable to conclude that they are behaving rationally by not acquiring such information:
- Premise: Rational to acquire information Expect benefits to outweigh the costs
Justify: Expect benefits to outweigh costs
Conclusion: Rational to acquire information