Answers (A), (B), and (D) would have been better (I dare say right) if they said something like:
Parents should encourage children to do something only if it doesn't make unhappy.
Parents should encourage children to do only those things that don't lead them to develop a sense of resentment.
Economist: Machinery firms in this country argue that in order to grow big enough to compete successfully with foreign rivals, the protection that they have been receiving from foreign competition must be extended for several more years. Yet these firms have been receiving protection from foreign competition for the last ten years. If it were possible for protection from foreign competition to enable this country’s machinery firms to grow big enough to compete successfully with foreign rivals, ten years would be a sufficient time frame for this to happen.
Summary
If protection from foreign competition were possible in order to allow domestic machinery firms to successfully compete with foreign machinery firms, ten years would be a sufficient timeframe for this purpose. However domestic machinery firms have had protection from foreign competition for the last ten years, and these firms claim that this protection must be extended for several more years.
Strongly Supported Conclusions
It is not possible that protection from foreign competition will allow domestic machinery firms to grow big enough to compete with foreign machinery firms.
A
Protection from foreign competition rarely if ever enables firms to grow big enough to compete with foreign rivals.
The Economist’s argument is limited to machinery firms in the Economist’s country. We don’t know whether protection “rarely” allows firms to grow big enough generally. We only know that protection does not allow domestic machinery firms to grow big enough.
B
Ten years is a sufficient time frame for assessing the success of any economic policy.
We don’t know if ten years is sufficient for evaluating any and every economic policy. We only know ten years is sufficient for evaluating one economic policy that applies to domestic machinery firms.
C
None of the machinery firms in the economist’s country has grown significantly over the last ten years.
We don’t know whether or not any machinery firm in the economist’s county has grown “significantly.” We only know that these machinery firms haven’t grown big enough to compete with foreign machinery firms.
D
Most of the machinery firms in the economist’s country will go out of business unless they are protected from foreign competition.
We don’t know whether any of the machinery firms in the Economist’s country will go out of business if these firms are not protected from foreign competition.
E
Protection from foreign competition will not enable machinery firms in the economist’s country to grow big enough to take on foreign rivals.
It is not possible that protection from foreign competition will allow domestic machinery firms to grow big enough to compete since these firms have already been receiving protection for ten years.
A
infers that something is not the case on the grounds that there is only a small amount of evidence for its being the case
B
appeals to personal opinion to establish a factual claim
C
generalizes about the whole neighborhood based on the case of one store
D
draws a conclusion on the basis of a biased sample
E
fails to consider that crime might affect the neighborhood negatively without affecting businesses negatively
To go further, we can anticipate a more specific connection between the premise and conclusion. We know from the premise that serious novelists care about literary style. To make the argument valid, we want to get from “care about literary style” to “not motivated primarily by desire to make money.”
A
No novel written by a serious novelist in fact appeals to the general public.
B
No novelist who cares about literary style is motivated primarily by the desire to make money.
C
No novelist whose novels exhibit good literary style is motivated primarily by the desire to make money.
D
Any novelist who is motivated primarily by the desire to make money writes novels that in fact appeal to the general public.
E
Any novel that in fact appeals to the general public was written by a novelist motivated primarily by the desire to make money.
A
It fails to address adequately the possibility that the likelihood of a system’s failing need not increase with the number of ways in which it can fail.
B
It takes for granted that any failure in an air bag’s computer control system will cause that air bag to inflate accidentally.
C
It fails to address adequately the possibility that air bags may often accidentally inflate even when their computer control systems do not fail.
D
It overlooks the possibility that, even if the new computer control systems exacerbate the problems with accidental air bag inflation, they may have advantages that outweigh this disadvantage.
E
It overlooks the possibility that, even if air bags occasionally cause accidental injuries, they may nonetheless be responsible for preventing many more injuries than they cause.