- Tue Apr 26, 2016 3:57 pm
#23439
Complete Question Explanation
Justify the Conclusion-#%. The correct answer choice is (B)
The stimulus here is an interesting one, full of numerical information and relationships. Perhaps the first thing that should jump out at you is how the author goes from 1991 to 1992 in talking about films made from books. The second point of interest is the novels-to-films connection. Let's break down each piece and see what the author has done:
Answer choice (A): This answer choice is immediately suspect because we don't have any knowledge about scripts. Second, the answer is not confined to country Z but instead talks generally about "films," whereas the argument was just about country Z. So, there are two solid reasons to dislike this answer.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. This answer eliminates non-novels as a source for films in 1992, meaning that the conclusion in the stimulus is now true. Since this answer close the hole in the argument, we can now properly conclude that "no more than one quarter of them were based on books published in country Z in 1991" (and indeed, it was exactly a quarter, which is consistent with "no more than a quarter").
Answer choice (C): This answer choice scrambles the years of the films and the novels, and is wrong.
Answer choice (D): This answer choice proves a source other than books published in 1991 for some films, and improves the argument, but it does not justify the argument. You need to select a response that deals with all remaining 75 books, not just some of those books.
Answer choice (E): This answer choice discusses films from the wrong year.
Justify the Conclusion-#%. The correct answer choice is (B)
The stimulus here is an interesting one, full of numerical information and relationships. Perhaps the first thing that should jump out at you is how the author goes from 1991 to 1992 in talking about films made from books. The second point of interest is the novels-to-films connection. Let's break down each piece and see what the author has done:
- Premise: "Five thousand of the 50,000 books published in country Z in 1991 were novels." — This seems fairly straightforward, indicating that novels made up 10% of the books published in country Z in 1991. We can also infer here that there were a huge amount of other types of books (45,000 to be precise) that were not novels.
Premise: "Exactly 25 of the films released in country Z in 1992 were based on those novels." — This premise moves into 1992, and indicates that just 25 films in country Z in 1992 were based on those 5,000 novels published in 1991. So far we have a funnel of sorts within country Z (and these arrows aren't conditional, just showing a pathway): 50,000 books published in 1991 5,000 of them were novels 25 films released in 1992 were based on those novels.
Premise: "Since 100 films were released in country Z in 1992," — We now have a total for films released in country Z in 1992, namely that there were 100 total. Thus, we can conclude at this point that one-quarter of the films released in 1992 in country Z were based on novels published in country Z in 1991.
Conclusion: "no more than one quarter of them were based on books published in country Z in 1991" — Here comes the conclusion, and we immediately have a problem. The conclusion doesn't mirror the exact conclusion made above about based on novels released in 1991, but instead broadens the category to based on books published in country Z in 1991. That leap from novels to books is an issue, and this is the hole that must be closed in order to Justify the Conclusion here. How can that be done? By ruling out the possibility that there were films released in 1992 that were based on non-novels from 1991. Or, in other words, making it so only novels were used as the basis for films in 1992.
Answer choice (A): This answer choice is immediately suspect because we don't have any knowledge about scripts. Second, the answer is not confined to country Z but instead talks generally about "films," whereas the argument was just about country Z. So, there are two solid reasons to dislike this answer.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. This answer eliminates non-novels as a source for films in 1992, meaning that the conclusion in the stimulus is now true. Since this answer close the hole in the argument, we can now properly conclude that "no more than one quarter of them were based on books published in country Z in 1991" (and indeed, it was exactly a quarter, which is consistent with "no more than a quarter").
Answer choice (C): This answer choice scrambles the years of the films and the novels, and is wrong.
Answer choice (D): This answer choice proves a source other than books published in 1991 for some films, and improves the argument, but it does not justify the argument. You need to select a response that deals with all remaining 75 books, not just some of those books.
Answer choice (E): This answer choice discusses films from the wrong year.