- Fri Apr 29, 2016 4:26 pm
#23672
Complete Question Explanation
Assumption. The correct answer choice is (B)
The argument describes a situation in which residents and environmental activists are concerned that Biocarb's sterilization plant will pollute an area. Biocarb's president argues that the plant cannot cause pollution because the waste would be sterile after processing.
The president's argument is incomplete at best, because there is obviously the chance that the plant could cause pollution directly by an accident before sterilization, or indirectly by transportation issues.
You are asked to identify a necessary assumption, so you should focus on the incomplete nature of the president's evidence.
Answer choice (A): Since a response about what occurs after sterilization is not relevant to the incomplete nature of the argument, this choice is wrong. Furthermore, the belief of the environmentalist group is neither necessary nor sufficient to establish what is the actual case.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. The president assumes that nothing can go wrong before the sterilization occurs.
Answer choice (C): The president only concludes that the plant cannot cause pollution, not that there are no other concerns. This response, which addresses the possibility that pollution is not the only concern, is totally irrelevant and incorrect, because in fact pollution was the issue.
Answer choice (D): Since the residents of the area were also concerned, this assumption is inconsistent with the stimulus and is incorrect. Furthermore, for the purposes of logic it is not necessary to assume anything about the source of the concern, it is only necessary to address the concern in a factual manner.
Answer choice (E): Since the president only asserted that the sterilization method had excellent results, not that the method had the best possible results, consideration of better methods is irrelevant. This choice is incorrect.
As a note to the somewhat concise explanations, you will notice that there is a theme in these choices. A person who read through the stimulus too quickly might have simply summarized that the president argues there is no reason not to put the plant in that area, in which case non-pollution objections seem legitimate. Or, an overly quick reading could have yielded similarly flawed representations of the conclusion. It is particularly noteworthy that a long stimulus that might encourage skimming is accompanied by 4 choices that, to the precise and careful reader, are entirely off-topic or irrelevant.
Assumption. The correct answer choice is (B)
The argument describes a situation in which residents and environmental activists are concerned that Biocarb's sterilization plant will pollute an area. Biocarb's president argues that the plant cannot cause pollution because the waste would be sterile after processing.
The president's argument is incomplete at best, because there is obviously the chance that the plant could cause pollution directly by an accident before sterilization, or indirectly by transportation issues.
You are asked to identify a necessary assumption, so you should focus on the incomplete nature of the president's evidence.
Answer choice (A): Since a response about what occurs after sterilization is not relevant to the incomplete nature of the argument, this choice is wrong. Furthermore, the belief of the environmentalist group is neither necessary nor sufficient to establish what is the actual case.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. The president assumes that nothing can go wrong before the sterilization occurs.
Answer choice (C): The president only concludes that the plant cannot cause pollution, not that there are no other concerns. This response, which addresses the possibility that pollution is not the only concern, is totally irrelevant and incorrect, because in fact pollution was the issue.
Answer choice (D): Since the residents of the area were also concerned, this assumption is inconsistent with the stimulus and is incorrect. Furthermore, for the purposes of logic it is not necessary to assume anything about the source of the concern, it is only necessary to address the concern in a factual manner.
Answer choice (E): Since the president only asserted that the sterilization method had excellent results, not that the method had the best possible results, consideration of better methods is irrelevant. This choice is incorrect.
As a note to the somewhat concise explanations, you will notice that there is a theme in these choices. A person who read through the stimulus too quickly might have simply summarized that the president argues there is no reason not to put the plant in that area, in which case non-pollution objections seem legitimate. Or, an overly quick reading could have yielded similarly flawed representations of the conclusion. It is particularly noteworthy that a long stimulus that might encourage skimming is accompanied by 4 choices that, to the precise and careful reader, are entirely off-topic or irrelevant.