Hey guys,
Although I understand why B is correct, I'm having trouble eliminating A. Any suggestions?
Thank you =)
layamaheshwari Wrote:I got this question right, and used a tip that Mary Adkins had posted on the thread for another sufficient question.
Simply put: the premises are all facts (variations of "is"), while the conclusion is a recommendation ("should" is key). Since this is a sufficient assumption question, our answer choice will have to guarantee the conclusion when plugged in to the stimulus and thus must be responsible for jump from facts to recommendation, i.e. it should also have "should" or some variation in it. I selected B because of that, and it was right!
Is this strategy foolproof, or am I setting myself up for a fall?
erikwoodward10 Wrote:layamaheshwari Wrote:I got this question right, and used a tip that Mary Adkins had posted on the thread for another sufficient question.
Simply put: the premises are all facts (variations of "is"), while the conclusion is a recommendation ("should" is key). Since this is a sufficient assumption question, our answer choice will have to guarantee the conclusion when plugged in to the stimulus and thus must be responsible for jump from facts to recommendation, i.e. it should also have "should" or some variation in it. I selected B because of that, and it was right!
Is this strategy foolproof, or am I setting myself up for a fall?
Yup. When the conclusion is qualified, we must have a qualifier in the premises in order for the conclusion to be valid. How can we conclude that something "should" happen if we don't have any qualified premises? We can't! This is a pretty simple question for exactly this reason, all of the other answer choices don't tell us why something *SHOULD* happen.