A university should not be entitled to patent the inventions of its faculty members. Universities, as guarantors of intellectual freedom, should encourage the free flow of ideas and the general dissemination of knowledge. Yet a university that retains the right to patent the inventions of its faculty members has a motive to suppress information about a potentially valuable discovery until the patent for it has been secured. Clearly, suppressing information concerning such discoveries is incompatible with the university's obligation to promote the free flow of ideas.
19. Which one of the following is an assumption that the argument makes?
(A) Universities are the only institutions that have an obligation to guarantee intellectual freedom.
(B) Most inventions by university faculty members would be profitable if patented.
(C) Publication of reports on research is the only practical way to disseminate information concerning new discoveries.
(D) Universities that have a motive to suppress information concerning discoveries by their faculty members will occasionally act on that motive
(E) If the inventions of a university faculty member are not patented by that university, then they will be patented by the faculty member instead
OA D
Can anyone first tell me what's the premise, conclusion and assumption ?
Thanks
Voodoo
<700+> Find the assumption
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Conclusion: Universities shouldn't be allowed to patent
Evidence: Universities are obliged to promote the free flow of ideas
The right to patent provides a motive to suppress information
Suppressing information violates the obligation to promote the free flow of ideas.
Assumption: The university will act on the motive to suppress. Answer D If you deny D, say the universities won't suppress information on their discoveries, there is no reason to prohibit patents.
Evidence: Universities are obliged to promote the free flow of ideas
The right to patent provides a motive to suppress information
Suppressing information violates the obligation to promote the free flow of ideas.
Assumption: The university will act on the motive to suppress. Answer D If you deny D, say the universities won't suppress information on their discoveries, there is no reason to prohibit patents.
Tani Wolff
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What about the word "occasionally" in choice D. If we negate, the word "occasionally" limit the scope and sentence says that universities will not occasionally act on the motive. It means that universities sometimes act on the motive.
Is it right?
[quote]Conclusion: Universities shouldn't be allowed to patent
Evidence: Universities are obliged to promote the free flow of ideas
The right to patent provides a motive to suppress information
Suppressing information violates the obligation to promote the free flow of ideas.
Assumption: The university will act on the motive to suppress. Answer D If you deny D, say the universities won't suppress information on their discoveries, there is no reason to prohibit patents. [/quote]
Is it right?
[quote]Conclusion: Universities shouldn't be allowed to patent
Evidence: Universities are obliged to promote the free flow of ideas
The right to patent provides a motive to suppress information
Suppressing information violates the obligation to promote the free flow of ideas.
Assumption: The university will act on the motive to suppress. Answer D If you deny D, say the universities won't suppress information on their discoveries, there is no reason to prohibit patents. [/quote]
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The argument is made with following reasoning
universities retain right to patent ==(1)=> motive to suppress information ==(2)==> so they shouldn't patent(conclusion);
link(2) has a huge gap in the reasoning: motive to suppress information ===> [so they patent with that motive] ===> so they shouldn't patent;
what is implied in the original argument is: universities patent with the motive to supress information. That is a assumption;
universities retain right to patent ==(1)=> motive to suppress information ==(2)==> so they shouldn't patent(conclusion);
link(2) has a huge gap in the reasoning: motive to suppress information ===> [so they patent with that motive] ===> so they shouldn't patent;
what is implied in the original argument is: universities patent with the motive to supress information. That is a assumption;
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A university should not be entitled to patent the inventions of its faculty members. Universities, as guarantors of intellectual freedom, should encourage the free flow of ideas and the general dissemination of knowledge. Yet a university
Premises: U should not be entitled to patent the inventions of its members
U should encourage the opening IDEAS and KNOWLEDGE
BUT: U (that retains the right to patent the inventions of its faculty members) has a motive to suppress information about a potentially valuable discovery until the patent for it has been secured.
Conclusion: Suppressing information concerning such discoveries IS INCOMPATIBLE with the university's obligation to promote the free flow of ideas.
19. Which one of the following is an assumption that the argument makes?
(A) Universities are the only institutions that have an obligation to guarantee intellectual freedom. => try to negate it. U are not only institutions that have an obligation to guarantee intellectual freedom => neutral affects to conclusion
(B) Most inventions by university faculty members would be profitable if patented. => out of scope
(C) Publication of reports on research is the only practical way to disseminate information concerning new discoveries. => irrelevant to the conclusion
(D) Universities that have a motive to suppress information concerning discoveries by their faculty members will occasionally act on that motive => if this University always act on that motive, the conclusion will break
(E) If the inventions of a university faculty member are not patented by that university, then they will be patented by the faculty member instead => irrelevant to the university
Premises: U should not be entitled to patent the inventions of its members
U should encourage the opening IDEAS and KNOWLEDGE
BUT: U (that retains the right to patent the inventions of its faculty members) has a motive to suppress information about a potentially valuable discovery until the patent for it has been secured.
Conclusion: Suppressing information concerning such discoveries IS INCOMPATIBLE with the university's obligation to promote the free flow of ideas.
19. Which one of the following is an assumption that the argument makes?
(A) Universities are the only institutions that have an obligation to guarantee intellectual freedom. => try to negate it. U are not only institutions that have an obligation to guarantee intellectual freedom => neutral affects to conclusion
(B) Most inventions by university faculty members would be profitable if patented. => out of scope
(C) Publication of reports on research is the only practical way to disseminate information concerning new discoveries. => irrelevant to the conclusion
(D) Universities that have a motive to suppress information concerning discoveries by their faculty members will occasionally act on that motive => if this University always act on that motive, the conclusion will break
(E) If the inventions of a university faculty member are not patented by that university, then they will be patented by the faculty member instead => irrelevant to the university