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 Francis O'Rourke
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#41122
Hi BlueBalloon,

If I am understanding you correctly, you are imagining a hypothetical answer choice that said the following:

..... (F) Only artworks that succeed in expressing deep emotions are the products of great artworks.

Is this how you imagine the rephrasing? If so, I am confused about how one artwork could ever be considered the product of another piece of great art. You would need to rephrase this answer choice even further to make grammatical sense.

I think your point is that you misread this answer choice to say something along the lines of "all great artworks succeed in expressing a deep emotion."

That would be correct, but you are unlikely to see an answer choice merely restate the exact same relationship as given by the stimulus in a Must Be True question. Instead you will be expected to work with the information given in some way - combining, negating, etc... - to yield an inference that was not directly given.
 lilmissunshine
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#46908
Jonathan Evans wrote:UHinberg,

Your analysis is sound, but actually our answer explanation is too! This answer choice could be true or could be false because there is insufficient support to know whether it is a valid inference. The fact that this answer choice fails to address the concept of "Great Artwork" is a powerful and useful process of elimination tool.
My thought process was exactly the same as UHinberg's. I still don't think the flaw in (A) involves "great artwork". As UHinberg pointed out, the second sentence in the stimulus extends to any artwork, so I don't see any problem with (A) focusing on "an artwork".

Could you further explain it for me? Thanks a lot!
 Alex Bodaken
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#47042
lilmissunshine,

Thanks for the question! I think a key distinction here is the difference between "capable of experiencing" as stated in the stimulus and "has actually experienced" as stated in answer choice (A). Specifically, we can infer that great artwork can only be made by those who are capable of experiencing the same emotion portrayed by the artwork, but we cannot say that the creator must have experienced this emotion, as answer choice (A) indicates. This distinction is enough to make (A) incorrect.

Hope that helps!
Alex
 lilmissunshine
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#47087
Hi Alex,

Thanks a lot! That's exactly why I ruled out (A). I just wanted to make sure my thinking process was correct. :)
 juanflores
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#60558
Good afternoon powerscore,

My original question was somewhat answered on a prior post/reply on this question in 2015. But I just want to clarify to know whether or not I am on the right track. I miss diagrammed the problem, but still got the right answer choice.

In the second sentence it starts with “but”. Is this considered a counter premise indicator? For that reason, it is introducing the “necessary condition” and is negated when diagrammed?

Also, there are multiple conditions how are they diagrammed in a chain? The explanation given states, “combining the first statement with the contrapositive of the second”. Do you chain the conditions with first statement then connect it with the second statement’s contrapositive?

Thank you for your time.
 Robert Carroll
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#60701
Juan,

"But" does not indicate a counterpremise in this stimulus because this stimulus does not contain an argument. Here, the word "but" has a merely rhetorical use, not a logical one - the second sentence, and indeed the entire stimulus, would have had the same structure if the second sentence lacked the word "but".

The conditionals are as follows:

great artwork :arrow: expresses deep emotion

artwork's creator can experience emotion :arrow: artwork expresses that emotion

So the "but" had no logical meaning but was just indicating that a thing required for great artwork is something excluded by something else (excluded when the creator can't experience it).

I can combine those conditionals by saying something like "If an artwork is great, it must express a deep emotion, which must be something the creator can experience." So:

great artwork :arrow: expresses deep emotion :arrow: artwork's creator is capable of experiencing that same deep emotion

So for an artwork to be great, its creator must be able to experience at least one deep emotion.

Answer choice (D) exploits the contrapositive of this statement.

Robert Carroll
 crobyn
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#72497
Hi Powerscore,

I am still having trouble understanding what makes "A" incorrect.

I am also having difficulty diagramming more complex problems like this one. I sometimes lose track of what my abbreviations signify. Any advice?

Thank you!
 Claire Horan
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#72500
Hi Crobyn,

Answer choice (A) is tricky, and to see the problem you have to read very closely. Contrast the language in answer choice (A) of a computer having "actually experienced" an emotion with the language in the stimulus of being "incapable of experiencing" ("capable" when negated). A creator of artwork could be capable of experiencing an emotion and still not have actually experienced it. That slippage in language, that slight difference, is what makes choice (A) incorrect. Alex did a good job of explaining this, above.

As to your second question: What can you do when your own diagrams confuse you? Feel free to abandon acronyms or abbreviations if they don't help you solve problems accurately and efficiently. It is fine to use words instead. Notice that Robert used full words in his diagram. Try it, and see how it works for you.

Good luck!
 lety.gordill@gmail.com
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#90300
I got lost on the part where the chaining happens. Would it be possible to have an explanation of how and why they were chained together?
 Jeremy Press
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#90347
Hi Lety,

The first sentence links to the second sentence through the common idea of an artwork expressing emotion.

So, if you diagram the first sentence using plain language (instead of abbreviations), you'd get:

Great ----> Express deep emotion

If you diagram the second sentence using plain language, you'd get:

Creator capable of experiencing an emotion ------> Express that emotion

OR (contrapositive)

Express an emotion -----> Creator capable of experiencing that emotion

Think about the necessary condition of the first diagram, "Express deep emotion." Something that expresses deep emotion is in fact something that expresses emotion. This means we can link the two together. Because if it expresses deep emotion, then it expresses emotion, and if it expresses emotion, then the creator must be capable of experiencing that emotion. So we can connect like so:

Great ----> Express deep emotion -----> Creator capable of experiencing deep emotion

Does that help? Hopefully so!

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