Question Type:
Sufficient Assumption
Stimulus Breakdown:
Rephrased conclusion: The railroad company is not responsible when someone goes around the gate and gets hit by a train.
Premises: The gates are a clear warning, but some people go around it anyway. Licensed drivers are adults who know better.
Answer Anticipation:
The rephrased conclusion here (thank you again, pivot word!) is pretty strong - the Editorialist believes RR companies are not responsible for these accidents. In order to back that up, we need to know the "rules" for responsbility. Here, the author states that adults should know better because they were given fair warning. The correct answer will connect these two.
Correct answer:
(C)
Answer choice analysis:
(A) This answer choice doesn't create a situation where someone could be ruled to not be responsible for an outcome, so it doesn't bridge the gap.
(B) Degree. "Some measures" doesn't necessarily include the measures here. Also, even if these adults are responsible, someone else could share that responsibility.
(C) Boom. The RR company put up a warning. If adults drive around this "clear warning", they are disregarding it. According to this answer, that makes the adults fully responsible for the accidents, which absolves the RR companies.
(D) Out of scope. The question is of responsibility for the accident. If children are harmed, it could be the responsibility of the adult driving the car instead of the RR company.
(E) If anything, this would be necessary for the argument. Even if there are limits to responsibility, this answer doesn't establish that the RR company reached it in this situation.
Takeaway/Pattern:
When there's a new term in the conclusion of a Sufficient Assumption question (here, responsibility), it will almost certainly show up in the answer. Also, when a conclusion draws a judgment, the argument needs to establish the criteria for that judgment. Here, the conclusion judges someone to lack responsibility, so the criteria for responsibility must be established. Since they weren't in the argument, the correct answer will almost always do so.
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