Bunuel
Psychologists who wish to have one of their book review nominated for the prestigious Boatwright Psychology Review award should not submit book review articles that review more than three books at a time. This is because editors for the Boatwright Psychology Review will not publish a book review article if it is too lengthy and cumbersome to read. In their submission guidelines, the editors explicitly state that review articles that cover more than three books at a time are considered too lengthy and cumbersome to read.
Which of the following statements represents an assumption upon which the argument relies?
(A) The book reviews articles that covers the most books must be the lengthiest and most cumbersome article to read.
(B) If a book review article is published in the Boatwright Psychology Review, that article will receive the prestigious Boatwright Psychology Review award.
(C) All articles published in the Boatwright Psychology Review must be limited to a certain length specified by the editors.
(D) The Boatwright Psychology Review editors generally prefer book review articles that cover one book rather than books.
(E) To be nominated for the Boatwright Psychology Review award, a psychologist's book review article must be published in the Boatwright Psychology Review.
Those Psychologists who write book reviews, if they wish to get nominated for the prestigious Boatwright Psychology Review award (BWPRA) must submit book review articles.
This book review article submitted should not exceed 3 books. The author adds his point that : such review articles which has more than 3 books, will not be considered for publication. The reason behind it was - lengthy, cumbersome and time consuming.
Let’s see what the actual editor’s guidelines during submission have to say
EXPLICITLY - “
The review articles that cover more than 3 Books are considered lengthy and cumbersome “. This doesn’t beat around the bush, no where in the guidelines was it mentioned review articles more than 3 books will not be taken into consideration or banned or not reviewed.
In this light, let’s jump Into the options (
Remember all assumption options, have to pass the negation test to stand the trail). (A) The book reviews articles that covers the most books must be the lengthiest and most cumbersome article to read.
The choice of word : MOST is a blanket word covering a huge gamut of books ( anything greater than 50%), while the question sticks to a specific number threshold - 3 ( as Explicitly stated by the Editors Book Review guidelines).Hence, wrong.
(B) If a book review article is published in the Boatwright Psychology Review, that article will receive the prestigious Boatwright Psychology Review award.
This option confuses between nominations and getting the award. As, nominations are a precursor towards the award. Hence, ruled out for wrong comparison.
(C) All articles published in the Boatwright Psychology Review must be limited to a certain length specified by the editors.
This seems a tricky option - limited to certain length, as the mind is pre fixed to number 3 ( threshold). This option seems tempting. But, if u see the last time, the actual guidelines by Book reviewers explicitly mentions, if book review greater than 3 books it’s considered to be lengthy, cumbersome. Not a fixed constraint. Hence, Wrong.
(D) The Boatwright Psychology Review editors generally prefer book review articles that cover one book rather than books.
No where is the preference on topic or size is mentioned. They expressed their opinion to the authors (psychologists) to consider the review books as less as possible. This doesn’t necessarily mean imposing fix size restrictions. Hence, Wrong.
(E) To be nominated for the Boatwright Psychology Review award, a psychologist's book review article must be published in the Boatwright Psychology Review.This option clearly states, only if u publish in the BWPR , you can claim yourself eligible for the BWPRA. The question is pertaining to the guidelines and limitations for publishing a review article.
Negation test: To be nominated for the BWPRA, the article need NOT be PUBLISHED in the BWPR. This contradicts the fact in the question. The outcome is a Sure NO.
Option E is the correct answer.