OFFICIAL EXPLANATIONQuote:
Which of the following is an assumption on which the argument depends?
It is assumption time, so make sure you go into the passage and answer choices with the right method, the one that works for you. I know that for many people, the negation technique is a failsafe approach; for others, such as myself, looking for a logical link to fill the gap from A to C suffices. (I cannot speak for others, but I do not like altering the original answer choices, particularly when the negation can get tricky.) What does the passage tell us?
Quote:
Many parents think of figures such as Santa Claus, the Easter Bunny, and the Tooth Fairy as harmless suggestions that allow children to be imaginative and grow more excited about holidays and life events. However, lying to children violates the moral obligation parents have to teach their children the importance of telling the truth.
Ha ha, we finally get a Christmas-themed question, and the jolly fat man from the North Pole makes an appearance, alongside other equally mythical characters. The first sentence is a statement of fact in the argument. We are told what
many parents think, namely that the fictitious figures mentioned are
harmless suggestions for entertaining children, more or less.
The second sentence is the argument, which takes a much more serious angle: parents have a
moral obligation... to teach their children the importance of telling the truth.
The passage is easy to break down. What do the answer choices have in store for us?
Quote:
(A) Parents cause more harm by lying to their children than by telling them there is no Santa Claus, Easter Bunny, or Tooth Fairy.
Although such a consideration would constitute an assumption, it is not one we can draw from the passage. The degrees of harmfulness of one course of action against another are not discussed at all. No comparison is to be found. Thus, we need not assume that this line must fit between sentences one and two.
Quote:
(B) Parents are bound to tell the truth.
What a wonderful answer choice... but ultimately, it is nothing more than a clever trap. Although the keywords align with those in the argument, this answer choice cuts out a major component of what the argument says and splices together the remaining pieces. Just because parents are bound
to teach their children about the truth does not necessarily mean that those parents have to tell the truth. There is a subtle difference between preaching and practicing what you preach, as the saying goes, that allows us to put this one on hold and seek a cleaner alternative, one that does not remove a vital component of the argument. I would
yellow light this answer in my first pass of the options, but it would not survive a second.
Quote:
(C) Children should be allowed to be imaginative without being lied to by their parents.
The focus of the argument is on parents, not on children. This answer choice reaches back from the argument and brings in information from the first line of the passage, but such a consideration does not come up in the argument itself. In terms of real-world logic, this is the sort of association that sounds perfectly reasonable, but it is just for this reason that you have to watch out for it on this test. These passages, questions, and the correct answers tied to them must adhere to a linear logic, and close enough is not good enough.
Quote:
(D) Children are not able to tell for themselves that Santa Claus, the Easter Bunny, or the Tooth Fairy are not real-life figures.
I would call this the easiest answer to eliminate. Again, the focus of the argument is on parents, those who do the lying to their children. Whether the children themselves do or do not know the true nature of, say, Santa Claus, is irrelevant to the argument, making this answer choice a non-assumption. As an aside, I have seen students before in the CR forum struggle with doubly negated answer choices. A common question might be,
Which "not" should I remove? If negation is your tool of choice, then use your best judgment to see which one affects the statement in a way that ties most reasonably and directly into the argument. (In this case, I would remove the first
not, but the line still would not make a difference.)
Quote:
(E) Parents must teach their children certain values.
Many times, strong language such as
must works against the viability of an answer choice, but in this case,
must aligns well with
obligation from the passage. Then, the key component that was missing in (B), the notion of
teaching children, of passing on knowledge directly from parents to children, makes an appearance here. Finally,
certain values nicely offsets the earlier absolute (in
must), such that the answer choice on the whole seems somewhat reserved. This sort of vague, cautious language is often a hallmark of a correct answer, and here, we have no trouble qualifying what
certain values may be:
moral values on
the importance of telling the truth. If this answer choice were untrue, the argument would fall apart, so it is a required assumption. (B) was close, but this one is unassailable.
I hope that helps. If you chose (B), just remember to consult the passage as often as necessary so that you are assessing the answer choices with an eye on the
exact language used in the argument. This one comes down to two viable options, in my mind, but one of them suffers from a sin of omission, if I do say so myself.
- Andrew
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