- Sun Jan 20, 2013 12:00 am
#35625
Complete Question Explanation
Must Be True—SN. The correct answer choice is (B)
This stimulus provides a number of conditional statements. First, if the number of consumers who live downtown increases, the profits of downtown businesses will go up as well:
The condition that follows “unless” is the necessary condition, and the other condition gets negated:
Since this stimulus is a fact set, and doesn’t draw any conclusion, the question that follows is, predictably, a Must be True question. The right answer is the one that passes the Fact Test; it will be the choice that can be confirmed by the conditional statements provided by the council member.
Answer choice (A): The conditional statements in the stimulus provide that a traffic decrease is necessary for downtown profits to increase, but a decrease in downtown traffic is sufficient to draw no inferences.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice, confirmed by the conditional chain diagrammed above. The council member established that if the cost of living downtown decreases, the number of consumers living downtown will increase, which, in turn, will lead to increased profits for downtown businesses.
Answer choice (C): Since a decrease in downtown traffic is sufficient to conclude nothing, this choice cannot be the right answer to this Must be True question.
Answer choice (D): This answer choice is wrong for the same reason as answer choices (A) and (C). Decreasing downtown traffic is necessary for downtown business profits to increase, but this traffic decrease is sufficient to conclude nothing, as is reflected in the diagram above.
Answer choice (E): If downtown business profits increase, the stimulus provides, downtown congestion must decrease, but there is no way to conclude what will happen to the number of consumers living downtown.
Must Be True—SN. The correct answer choice is (B)
This stimulus provides a number of conditional statements. First, if the number of consumers who live downtown increases, the profits of downtown businesses will go up as well:
- #dt consumers increase dt profits increase
- cost of dt living decrease # dtconsumers increase
- cost of dt living decrease #dt consumers increase dt profits increase
The condition that follows “unless” is the necessary condition, and the other condition gets negated:
- dt profits increase traffic decrease
Since this stimulus is a fact set, and doesn’t draw any conclusion, the question that follows is, predictably, a Must be True question. The right answer is the one that passes the Fact Test; it will be the choice that can be confirmed by the conditional statements provided by the council member.
Answer choice (A): The conditional statements in the stimulus provide that a traffic decrease is necessary for downtown profits to increase, but a decrease in downtown traffic is sufficient to draw no inferences.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice, confirmed by the conditional chain diagrammed above. The council member established that if the cost of living downtown decreases, the number of consumers living downtown will increase, which, in turn, will lead to increased profits for downtown businesses.
Answer choice (C): Since a decrease in downtown traffic is sufficient to conclude nothing, this choice cannot be the right answer to this Must be True question.
Answer choice (D): This answer choice is wrong for the same reason as answer choices (A) and (C). Decreasing downtown traffic is necessary for downtown business profits to increase, but this traffic decrease is sufficient to conclude nothing, as is reflected in the diagram above.
Answer choice (E): If downtown business profits increase, the stimulus provides, downtown congestion must decrease, but there is no way to conclude what will happen to the number of consumers living downtown.