sanghar
Hi Mike, thanks for your explanation.
While I arrived at option A using the same reasoning, I have reason to think this is not really an assumption, only seems like one. The conclusion in question is "The fact that there is correlation with eye skills - they need not be fixed - implies IQ is hereditary". Now a true assumption when negated (or seen as a bridge) should break (lead to) this conclusion.
Option A, however, is the assumption only for the claim that "eye skills are not modifiable". It does nothing to bridge to the claim that IQ is hereditary. What I'm getting at is that even if eye skills could change during one's lifetime, we wouldn't know if that makes any difference to the issue of IQ.
The assumption should be linking to an intermediate conclusion or the final conclusion. Here there is no intermediate conclusion and option A does not properly link to whether IQ is hereditary. In fact for it to do so, option A requires the assumption that "IQ's correlation with eye dexterity should only be considered if eye dexterity hasn't been cultivated".
Dear
sanghar,
I'm happy to respond.
My friend, if you are too formal and rigid in adhering to rigorous requirements of what constitutes an assumption, you run the risk of missing real assumptions on real GMAT CR arguments. You are trying to be very formulaic and neat about the nature of arguments, and there's an irreducible "messiness" about real world arguments, including those you will see on the GMAT.
Also, I would urge you to pay attention to the exact wording of (A)---
exact wording is always important on GMAT CR.
The speed in which a person orients his or her eyes towards a stimulus is a skill that cannot be modified by experience.In other words, one can't simply practice it and get better. It's not just the passive idea of change over time. This is the idea of doing something intentional to modify the skill.
For example, getting a high GMAT score IS "
a skill that can be modified by experience." This is precisely why people take courses and sit for retakes. The experience of previous GMATs and/or the experience provided by
Magoosh or
MGMAT or wherever definitely causes folks in gain skill and change their outcome on the test. Therefore, what the GMAT "measures" about a person is not an innate hereditary quality, because it can be predictably altered by practice.
You see, up until the 1990s, the College Board made claims suggesting that the SAT was the equivalent of an IQ test. Then, Kaplan and other test prep companies demonstrated, quite conclusively, that their training could raise a student's SAT score: that definitively proved that SAT score was not measuring something innate and genetically determined, and in the face of possible lawsuits, the College Board was required to make changes to its claim. This scenario might have been the inspiration for this question, I don't know.
If we know (A), do we thereby know that eye skills are a genetically determined hereditary trait? Not necessarily. BUT, if I can so some kind of special practice, maybe take "Kaplan's premium eye movement course," and improve this skill, then it absolutely is not a genetic trait. Anything on which I can improve by studying is not innate. Thus, if (A) is not true, it destroys the argument. That's an assumption.
Does all this make sense?
Mike