- Wed Oct 27, 2021 6:17 pm
#91654
Hello,
For this question, the argument's mistake is that they are assuming that one factor in determining public health, which exists among many, is the only factor that would contribute its status overall. In other words, there is failure to consider the entire breadth of the indicator used (public health), which necessarily is determined by factors (disease, lifestyle, nutrition, etc.) that are at most indirectly related to that which it is used to measure (automobile emissions).
The answer therefore, must make a similar error, and answer choice D does not do this, in that this answer's metric, injuries to skydivers, is not influenced by factors indirectly related to the thing it is measuring, skydiving. While you might possibly argue that injuries to skydivers could be caused by such factors as the relative number of new people trying it, the height planes drop people off from, etc., all of this is inherently still dependent upon and directly related to the overall danger of skydiving, in a way that the sedentary lifestyle of the public or its access to medications are not with respect to automobile emissions.
Answer choice C however does, since it uses the broader metric traffic accidents to measure the safety of cell phone usage while driving, with the idea being that traffic accidents can certainly caused by other things unrelated to cell phone usage (although we might question the relevance of this by today's saturation of cell phones... AND automated cars!)
Let me know if you have further questions on this.