Question Type:
Sufficient Assumption
Stimulus Breakdown:
Conclusion: These rare innovators tend to anger the majority.
Evidence: These rare innovators are dissatisfied with mere habitual assent to widely held beliefs. If you're dissatisfied with mere habitual assent to widely held beliefs, you tend to seek out controvery. People who seek controversy enjoy demonstrating the falsehood of popular views.
Answer Anticipation:
Sufficient Assumption is all about proving the conclusion, so it's good to start by unpacking what ideas are in the conclusion. To prove this conclusion, we need to have
1. Rare innovators tend to be XYZ.
2. If you're XYZ, you anger the majority.
Does the Evidence provide us with either of those? It tells us about what rare innovators tend to be/do. But it provides no rule that says, "If you're XYZ, then you anger the majority". So we know the correct answer will have to provide that rule.
(Knowing just that would eliminate A and C immediately, because there's no "anger the majority", and it would eliminate D and E on closer inspection because those answers offer rules that say "If you anger the majority, then you're XYZ")
What were we told about these rare innovators? They don't like just assenting to widely held beliefs. They tend to seek out controversy, so they tend to enjoy demonstrating the falsehood of popular viewpoints. The correct answer could take any of those three details we know about the 'rare innovators' and construct a correct answer.
f.e., "If you're dissatisfied with merely assenting to widely held beliefs, then you tend to anger the majority".
"If you tend to seek out controversy, then you anger the majority."
"If you enjoy demonstrating the falsehood of popular viewpoints, then you anger the majority."
That last one is by far the most likely answer, since it rewards us for following the whole train of logic from,
"rare innovator --> dislike mere assent --> seek out controversy --> enjoy demonstrating falsity of popular views".
Correct Answer:
B
Answer Choice Analysis:
(A) Without a rule that says "If you're _____ , then you anger the majority", we cannot prove the conclusion. This choice does not provide any rule about "anger the majority".
(B) Yes! "If you enjoy demonstrating the falsity of popular views, you anger the majority". We know that rare innovators tend to seek out controvesy, and controversy-seekers enjoy demonstrating the falsity of popular views.
(C) Without a rule that says "If you're _____ , then you anger the majority", we cannot prove the conclusion. This choice does not provide any rule about "anger the majority".
(D) Without a rule that says "If you're _____ , then you anger the majority", we cannot prove the conclusion. This choice says, "If you anger the majority, then you enjoy demonstrating the falsity of popular views".
(E) Without a rule that says "If you're _____ , then you anger the majority", we cannot prove the conclusion. This choice says, "If you anger the majority, then you are dissatisfied with merely assenting to widely held beliefs."
Takeaway/Pattern: Like almost all Sufficient Assumption questions, you should know what you want here before you look at answers. Focus on any "New Guy" in the conclusion, for that term MUST be in the correct answer. Focus on the "If Premise, then Conclusion" order to your prephrases, because trap answers (like D and E) like to provide correct ideas but in an incorrect order. If there is a chain of conditional logic, figure out what needs to be attached to the front or to the end of the chain in order to make the idea in the Conclusion look like the beginning/ending of that chain.
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