tim Wrote:Exactly. If we assume that he completed the work all in a single year, then 1508 is definitely one of the years this could have happened, which is entirely consistent with the argument. Assuming he did everything in a single year restricts the dates in such a way that the conclusion is sound. If on the other hand we allowed him to to work for several years, he could have started before 1507 and/or ended after 1509. This is why we need the assumption in order to be sure of the conclusion..
Tim - you are not assuming he completed the work in a single year, the conclusion is in fact stating Mich finished the painting in 1508.
Does anyone else think: A) this question is terribly inconsistent to what is actually on the GMAT? B) incorrect answer choice?
Conclusion - Mich completed the painting in 1508.
Premise 1 - Coin in painting wasn't minted until in 1507.
Premise 2 - Pigment in painting no longer used by Mich sometime during 1509.
What type of question? Assumption. Meaning, the conclusion MUST be true due to an unstated premise. If you negate this Assumption, the Conclusion ceases to be true.
The Manhattan answer is B: Mich did not
work on the painting over the course of several years.
Let's first point out the difference between B and the conclusion. Conclusion states the painting must have been COMPLETED in 1508. Answer choice B states that the painting wasn't WORKED ON over the course of several years.
Let's negate answer choice B. The painting
was worked on over the course of several years. Does this mean the painting wasn't completed in 1508? No it does not rule out that possibility.
As previously stated, the simple nature of assumptions/conclusions is that if you NEGATE the assumption, it will DESTROY (wipe-out, kill, terminate etc.) the conclusion. The conclusion is still very much in the working realm of possibilities when we negate Answer choice B.
Ex: In 1505 Mich started working on the painting and stopped, before going on vacation until 1507. He came back and started working on the painting again. While working on the painting in 1507/1508 he decided to add in this brand new coin recently minted. He completed the painting in 1508. The painting was worked on over the course of several years but was completed in 1508.
This proves the assumption can be negated and the conclusion still proven true.
OK now someone prove me wrong.