- Tue Sep 21, 2021 3:46 pm
#90592
Complete Question Explanation
Weaken. The correct answer choice is (D).
In this stimulus, a scientist argues that the risk of health problems from genetically engineered foodstuffs is minimal. Their support for this conclusion is that in most cases, only a single gene in a plant's genetic structure is changed, and since this change is so slight, it cannot have effects significant enough to be worrisome.
My immediate response to this is, how do we know? I'm not convinced that a single gene is necessarily insignificant because it's just one gene. Sure, it's possible, maybe even likely, but we're being asked to take this scientist's argument for granted, and I'm not convinced. If I were to prephrase an answer to this weaken question, I would look for something that says that just one gene can, in fact, be significant enough to render a foodstuff unsafe if tampered with.
Answer choice (A): This answer choice provides an irrelevant detail about genetically engineered plants that mentions nothing about the capacity of a single gene or health risks. Skip.
Answer choice (B): Careful--all this answer choice is saying is that any potential health risks may be reduced by other factors, but these health risks might still be serious enough to make the foods unsafe to eat. In addition, the phrase "may be" is a huge issue here--this means that there may not be any factors to reduce the health risks at all! Hard skip.
Answer choice (C): This is a tempting answer, but scientists don't necessarily need to know which exact gene determines every possible characteristic. They may only know the responsible genes of a few characteristics, and that is enough for them to genetically modify a foodstuff to their satisfaction. Overall, scientists not knowing this information does not necessarily mean that one gene, if altered in that plant, can produce adverse health effects. Let's see if there is a stronger answer choice out there.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. Boom, this is exactly what we're looking for. This answer choice says that there are plants that can be toxic to some animals whose toxicity is affected by the alteration of a single gene. This answer choice makes clear that one gene alone, if altered, can cause a plant to be unsafe for animals (like us!) to eat. If you disagree with the argument that humans are animals, it's very possible that we may eat the animals who eat these plants, thus bringing the health risk to us (albeit indirectly).
Answer choice (E): This is a completely irrelevant factoid about consumers who are strongly opposed to genetically-altered foods. Skip.
Weaken. The correct answer choice is (D).
In this stimulus, a scientist argues that the risk of health problems from genetically engineered foodstuffs is minimal. Their support for this conclusion is that in most cases, only a single gene in a plant's genetic structure is changed, and since this change is so slight, it cannot have effects significant enough to be worrisome.
My immediate response to this is, how do we know? I'm not convinced that a single gene is necessarily insignificant because it's just one gene. Sure, it's possible, maybe even likely, but we're being asked to take this scientist's argument for granted, and I'm not convinced. If I were to prephrase an answer to this weaken question, I would look for something that says that just one gene can, in fact, be significant enough to render a foodstuff unsafe if tampered with.
Answer choice (A): This answer choice provides an irrelevant detail about genetically engineered plants that mentions nothing about the capacity of a single gene or health risks. Skip.
Answer choice (B): Careful--all this answer choice is saying is that any potential health risks may be reduced by other factors, but these health risks might still be serious enough to make the foods unsafe to eat. In addition, the phrase "may be" is a huge issue here--this means that there may not be any factors to reduce the health risks at all! Hard skip.
Answer choice (C): This is a tempting answer, but scientists don't necessarily need to know which exact gene determines every possible characteristic. They may only know the responsible genes of a few characteristics, and that is enough for them to genetically modify a foodstuff to their satisfaction. Overall, scientists not knowing this information does not necessarily mean that one gene, if altered in that plant, can produce adverse health effects. Let's see if there is a stronger answer choice out there.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. Boom, this is exactly what we're looking for. This answer choice says that there are plants that can be toxic to some animals whose toxicity is affected by the alteration of a single gene. This answer choice makes clear that one gene alone, if altered, can cause a plant to be unsafe for animals (like us!) to eat. If you disagree with the argument that humans are animals, it's very possible that we may eat the animals who eat these plants, thus bringing the health risk to us (albeit indirectly).
Answer choice (E): This is a completely irrelevant factoid about consumers who are strongly opposed to genetically-altered foods. Skip.