- Tue Jan 20, 2009 12:00 am
#73709
Complete Question Explanation
Strengthen - PR. The correct answer choice is (E).
A sociologist argues that imperfect institutions cannot be the cause of some people becoming evil, as some romantics claim, because those institutions are just collections of people. We are to find a principle that strengthens that claim. We should be looking for a rule or guideline that connects the premise, about institutions being made up of individuals, to the conclusion, which is that institutions cannot make those individuals become evil.
Answer choice (A): This answer has nothing to do with whether institutions can make people become evil or not. It is only about how much good or evil an institution can do as a whole.
Answer choice (B): "Imperfect" is not the issue in the argument, and the stimulus already indicated that some institutions are imperfect. This claim does not strengthen the claim that these institutions cannot make people evil.
Answer choice (C): Optimism is not relevant to the argument. This answer does not connect the premises to the conclusion in any way.
Answer choice (D): While institutions may be a gauge of a society's values, this does not mean that those institutions cannot also influence individuals in that society and make them become evil.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. This answer connects the premises to the conclusion - a group that is made up entirely of individuals cannot cause a change in those individuals. This answer correctly points out the causal flaw that the sociologist has accused the romantics of making.
Strengthen - PR. The correct answer choice is (E).
A sociologist argues that imperfect institutions cannot be the cause of some people becoming evil, as some romantics claim, because those institutions are just collections of people. We are to find a principle that strengthens that claim. We should be looking for a rule or guideline that connects the premise, about institutions being made up of individuals, to the conclusion, which is that institutions cannot make those individuals become evil.
Answer choice (A): This answer has nothing to do with whether institutions can make people become evil or not. It is only about how much good or evil an institution can do as a whole.
Answer choice (B): "Imperfect" is not the issue in the argument, and the stimulus already indicated that some institutions are imperfect. This claim does not strengthen the claim that these institutions cannot make people evil.
Answer choice (C): Optimism is not relevant to the argument. This answer does not connect the premises to the conclusion in any way.
Answer choice (D): While institutions may be a gauge of a society's values, this does not mean that those institutions cannot also influence individuals in that society and make them become evil.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. This answer connects the premises to the conclusion - a group that is made up entirely of individuals cannot cause a change in those individuals. This answer correctly points out the causal flaw that the sociologist has accused the romantics of making.