- Thu Feb 25, 2016 12:00 am
#35096
Complete Question Explanation
Weaken—CE. The correct answer choice is (C)
In this stimulus, the author explicitly makes a causal argument, coming to the conclusion that the
atmospheric soot in certain cities is probably not the cause of a certain ailment among the residents
of those cities. The author reaches this conclusion despite evidence of a positive correlation between
the amount of soot in the atmosphere of those cities and the frequency of the ailment among the
cities’ residents. The reason the author thinks this relationship is probably not causal is that it is
typically the case that where there is a large amount of soot in the air, then there are also “high
concentrations of many other air pollutants.”
This is a Weaken question. We need to find the answer choice that casts doubt on the author’s
conclusion that the soot in the air in these cities is probably not the cause of the ailment among its
residents. This is an unusual question in which the author presents evidence of a correlation and then
infers that there is not a causal connection. In this case, showing that the alternate causes are not the
actual causes will attack the conclusion, in a reversal of what we normally do in Weaken questions,
which is to promote the idea that an alternate cause is responsible for the effect. So, we are looking
for an answer choice that indicates it is the soot that causes the ailment, rather than the alternate
cause, the other pollutants.
Answer choice (A): This answer choice strengthens the conclusion by showing that where the soot is
absent, the ailment is just as prevalent, attacking the idea that the soot causes the ailment.
Answer choice (B): This conditional rule cannot have any effect on the conclusion, because we do
not know whether the sufficient condition actually occurs.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice because it shows that the effect, i.e., the
ailment, is present even when the pollutants are not, strengthening the idea that the soot is the cause
of the ailment, contrary to the conclusion.
Answer choice (D): As with answer choice (B), this answer choice cannot have any effect on the
conclusion without our first being told whether the sufficient condition has been satisfied. In this
case, even if the sufficient condition were satisfied, it would still do nothing to attack the conclusion
that the soot is probably not the ailment’s cause.
Answer choice (E): This answer choice strengthens the conclusion by adding additional support to
the idea that pollutants other than the soot cause the ailment.
Weaken—CE. The correct answer choice is (C)
In this stimulus, the author explicitly makes a causal argument, coming to the conclusion that the
atmospheric soot in certain cities is probably not the cause of a certain ailment among the residents
of those cities. The author reaches this conclusion despite evidence of a positive correlation between
the amount of soot in the atmosphere of those cities and the frequency of the ailment among the
cities’ residents. The reason the author thinks this relationship is probably not causal is that it is
typically the case that where there is a large amount of soot in the air, then there are also “high
concentrations of many other air pollutants.”
This is a Weaken question. We need to find the answer choice that casts doubt on the author’s
conclusion that the soot in the air in these cities is probably not the cause of the ailment among its
residents. This is an unusual question in which the author presents evidence of a correlation and then
infers that there is not a causal connection. In this case, showing that the alternate causes are not the
actual causes will attack the conclusion, in a reversal of what we normally do in Weaken questions,
which is to promote the idea that an alternate cause is responsible for the effect. So, we are looking
for an answer choice that indicates it is the soot that causes the ailment, rather than the alternate
cause, the other pollutants.
Answer choice (A): This answer choice strengthens the conclusion by showing that where the soot is
absent, the ailment is just as prevalent, attacking the idea that the soot causes the ailment.
Answer choice (B): This conditional rule cannot have any effect on the conclusion, because we do
not know whether the sufficient condition actually occurs.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice because it shows that the effect, i.e., the
ailment, is present even when the pollutants are not, strengthening the idea that the soot is the cause
of the ailment, contrary to the conclusion.
Answer choice (D): As with answer choice (B), this answer choice cannot have any effect on the
conclusion without our first being told whether the sufficient condition has been satisfied. In this
case, even if the sufficient condition were satisfied, it would still do nothing to attack the conclusion
that the soot is probably not the ailment’s cause.
Answer choice (E): This answer choice strengthens the conclusion by adding additional support to
the idea that pollutants other than the soot cause the ailment.