aroraishita02
Hi AshutoshB,
Could you please post the OE?
CONCLUSION: The chairperson shouldn’t have released the report.
REASONING: The chairperson didn’t ask any other committee members whether the report should be released.
ANALYSIS: On sufficient assumption questions, you should look for a gap between reasoning and conclusion.
Here, we know only one fact: the members weren’t asked. We need to connect this to the conclusion. To prove that release was wrong, we should say “if members weren’t asked, then release was wrong”. The right answer is worded a bit differently (it’s harder to understand!) but it has the same effect.
Normally, you can diagram sufficient assumption questions. That’s because there are multiple conditional statements to link together. But this question doesn’t even have a conditional statement to diagram. There are just two separate facts. Diagramming is a useful tool, but don’t try to apply it blindly where it has no use.
___________
A. CORRECT. The contrapositive of this is: “consent ➞ permissible”
Since the chairperson didn’t ask the members, we don’t know whether they consented, Therefore, the release was not permissible.
B. This weakens the argument. It doesn’t prove that the release was ok, but this fact at least shows the members approved of the report.
C. We don’t know whether any commission members had objections. This doesn’t help.
Objection ➞ permissible
D. This doesn’t work. It’s possible that members would have agreed to a release if they had been consulted.
We need something that shows the release was wrong because the members weren’t consulted.
E. This doesn’t necessarily show the release was wrong. The stimulus never said that a release must obey the preferences of all members.