What does the Question Stem tell us?
Sufficient Assumption
Break down the Stimulus:
Conclusion: Smith isn't aware of the true meaning of her own words.
Evidence: Assuming Smith is correct, "the true meaning of an author's statements can be understood only through insight into the author's social circumstances".
Any prephrase?
On Sufficient Assumption, start with the claim you're trying to prove and ask yourself what we were told about these ideas in the Evidence (if there's any new term/idea that was NOT discussed in the evidence, it automatically must be in the correct answer).
We need to prove that Smith isn't aware of the true meaning of her words. We were given a conditional rule about what it takes to "understand true meaning of statements". Close enough! Let's use that rule.
The rule says "If you don't have insight into an author's social circumstances, you can't understand the true meaning of her statements." We want to prove that Smith doesn't understand the true meaning of Smith's statements.
So we need to establish the trigger for that rule: "Smith doesn't have insight into Smith's social circumstances".
Correct answer:
B
Answer choice analysis:
A) This doesn't match the trigger of the rule, so it's useless for proving the consequence of the rule. (Sniff test: "important" came outta nowhere)
B) This matches the trigger!
C) This doesn't match the trigger, which is about insight into social circumstances.
D) Doesn't match trigger. This is a total word blender. We cared about whether he had "insight" into an author's circumstances. This answer is talking about whether a theory is "insightful". That's a completely different subject matter.
E) Doesn't match trigger. (Sniff test: "not always" is super weak, but correct answers to Sufficient Assumption are almost always black and white)
Takeaway/Pattern: We know the conclusion is the final idea because it's the last in a chain of thinking. "we could apply this to Smith's statements" .. thus "if she's right, blah blah blah" ... this in turn suggests "Smith isn't aware of true meaning". There is a lot of fluff in the middle here making it harder to find the Main Conclusion and hoping to distract students from finding the usable rule provided in the first sentence. Along the way, this author actually makes a nec vs. suff error. Smith says "Don't know circumstances, can't understand true meaning", and then the author interprets this as "do know cirumstances, can understand (at least partially) true meaning". None of that needs our attention. We have to prove "Smith is not aware of true meaning" and we were provided with a conditional rule that allows us to say "Thus, not aware of true meaning". That should attract our attention.
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