Question Type:
Sufficient Assumption
Stimulus Breakdown:
Conclusion: Money was probably invented independently in more than one society.
Evidence: Money is an artificial, human invention, not an innate ability.
Answer Anticipation:
Okay … weak argument. Couldn't money have been invented just once, and then it was such a cool invention that it spread to all other societies that way? Either way, our task here is to prove the conclusion: "money was probably invented independently more than once". Evidence: "money is artificially invented, not innate, and money is universally found across societies". Missing bridge idea: "If something is not innate, was artificially invented, and is found in all societies, then it was probably invented independently in more than one society".
Correct Answer:
A
Answer Choice Analysis:
(A) Yes! This rules out our possible objection that "ONE society invented money, and everyone else just copied it." Since money is found in all societies, and some societies are completely removed from the influence of any other society, then money had to be invented independently at least twice.
(B) The conclusion/logic has nothing to do with language.
(C) We don't need a rule to prove that something is innate. We need a rule that says "if it's artificially invented and found everywhere, it got invented more than once".
(D) We don't need a counterfactual about what would happen if money were NOT useful.
(E) We only care about how the invention of money took place. Whether it was abandoned later doesn't address the mystery of whether it was invented more than once.
Takeaway/Pattern: Very weird correct answer. This is more typical of modern Sufficient Assumption corect answers: they find a way to get you to the finish line (i.e. proving the conclusion), but they don't use the classic format of "If premise, then conclusion".
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