- Sat Jan 21, 2012 12:00 am
#74188
Complete Question Explanation
Justify the Conclusion—SN. The correct answer choice is (A)
The argument can be analyzed as follows:
Premise: Vague laws set vague limits on people’s freedom.
Premise: Vague limits on people’s freedom makes it impossible for them to know for
certain whether their actions are legal.
Conclusion: Under vague laws people cannot feel secure.
There is a new element in the conclusion—“cannot feel secure”—that must be justified. There is also
an unconnected element in the premise—“know for certain whether their actions are legal”—that
will likely appear in the answer choice. Unfortunately, four of the answer choices contain those two
elements. Only answer choice (D) does not contain both, and as (D) also contains the “vague law”
element that appears in both a premise and the conclusion, we can eliminate (D) for the moment.
Given the plethora of answers that remain in contention, first examine the conditional structure that
is extant in the stimulus:
Premises: Vague laws Vague limits Know actions are legal
Conclusion: Vague laws Secure
Abstractly, this relationship is similar to:
Premises: A B C
Conclusion: A D
The relationship that must be added to the premise to prove the conclusion is:
C D
Translating the diagram back to the terms used in our premise and conclusion, we need a statement
similar to the following:
Know actions are legal Secure
Of course, the contrapositive of this statement would also be acceptable. Answer choice (A) is the
contrapositive and thus (A) is correct.
Answer choice (B): This answer is incorrect because it has a different level of certainty than the
conclusion: this answer uses the phrase “might not” when the conclusion uses “cannot.” If this flaw
were corrected, the answer would be correct.
Answer choice (C): This answer is the Mistaken Negation of the correct answer.
Answer choice (D): This answer was eliminated previously. This answer is also a Mistaken Negation
of the conclusion.
Answer choice (E): This answer is also the Mistaken Negation of the correct answer.
If you found yourself in trouble on this question, understanding that answers such as (C) and (E) are
identical would allow you to eliminate them under the Uniqueness Rule of Answer Choices (which
states that the correct answer must have unique properties and that any two answers that are identical
must both be incorrect).
Justify the Conclusion—SN. The correct answer choice is (A)
The argument can be analyzed as follows:
Premise: Vague laws set vague limits on people’s freedom.
Premise: Vague limits on people’s freedom makes it impossible for them to know for
certain whether their actions are legal.
Conclusion: Under vague laws people cannot feel secure.
There is a new element in the conclusion—“cannot feel secure”—that must be justified. There is also
an unconnected element in the premise—“know for certain whether their actions are legal”—that
will likely appear in the answer choice. Unfortunately, four of the answer choices contain those two
elements. Only answer choice (D) does not contain both, and as (D) also contains the “vague law”
element that appears in both a premise and the conclusion, we can eliminate (D) for the moment.
Given the plethora of answers that remain in contention, first examine the conditional structure that
is extant in the stimulus:
Premises: Vague laws Vague limits Know actions are legal
Conclusion: Vague laws Secure
Abstractly, this relationship is similar to:
Premises: A B C
Conclusion: A D
The relationship that must be added to the premise to prove the conclusion is:
C D
Translating the diagram back to the terms used in our premise and conclusion, we need a statement
similar to the following:
Know actions are legal Secure
Of course, the contrapositive of this statement would also be acceptable. Answer choice (A) is the
contrapositive and thus (A) is correct.
Answer choice (B): This answer is incorrect because it has a different level of certainty than the
conclusion: this answer uses the phrase “might not” when the conclusion uses “cannot.” If this flaw
were corrected, the answer would be correct.
Answer choice (C): This answer is the Mistaken Negation of the correct answer.
Answer choice (D): This answer was eliminated previously. This answer is also a Mistaken Negation
of the conclusion.
Answer choice (E): This answer is also the Mistaken Negation of the correct answer.
If you found yourself in trouble on this question, understanding that answers such as (C) and (E) are
identical would allow you to eliminate them under the Uniqueness Rule of Answer Choices (which
states that the correct answer must have unique properties and that any two answers that are identical
must both be incorrect).