PrepTest 84, Section 2, Question 8
One should not confuse a desire for money with a desire for material possessions. Much of what money can buy—education, travel, even prestige—are not material goods at all. Material goods themselves, moreover, are seldom desired for their own sake but rather for the experiences or activities they make possible.
One should not confuse a desire for money with a desire for material possessions. Much of what money can buy—education, travel, even prestige—are not material goods at all. Material goods themselves, moreover, are seldom desired for their own sake but rather for the experiences or activities they make possible.
One should not confuse a desire for money with a desire for material possessions. Much of what money can buy—education, travel, even prestige—are not material goods at all. Material goods themselves, moreover, are seldom desired for their own sake but rather for the experiences or activities they make possible.
One should not confuse a desire for money with a desire for material possessions. Much of what money can buy—education, travel, even prestige—are not material goods at all. Material goods themselves, moreover, are seldom desired for their own sake but rather for the experiences or activities they make possible.
The claim that one should not confuse a desire for money with a desire for material possessions plays which one of the following roles in the argument?
It is a generalization from which the argument draws inferences regarding several particular cases.
It is the overall conclusion of the argument.
It is a subsidiary conclusion used by the argument to support its overall conclusion.
It is a recommendation that the argument evaluates by considering specific counterexamples.
It alludes to a problem for which the conclusion of the argument offers a solution.
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