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#32547
Complete Question Explanation

Strengthen—CE. The correct answer choice is (C)

The author of this stimulus tells us that, generally, there is a correlation between sunspot activity and the appearance of an aurora borealis. Five days, on average, after sunspot activity occurs, an aurora borealis will appear.

On a certain day in 1128, an English monk recorded seeing two unusually large sunspots. Five days later, in southern Korea, a brilliant aurora borealis was observed. By applying the general rule regarding the correlation between sunspot activity and the appearance of an aurora borealis, the author concludes that the Korean sighting helps to confirm the English monk’s account.

By concluding that the Korean sighting of an aurora borealis helps to confirm the monks’s sighting of sunspot activity, the author is saying that the two events are linked. The implication is that this linkage is causal, meaning the sunspot activity caused the aurora borealis to appear. As with all causal conclusions on this LSAT, this conclusion is flawed and there are many questions left unanswered.

For example, the evidence established that there generally is a correlation between these types of phenomena, but is there actually a causal relationship between them? Even if there is, how often does an aurora borealis occur at that time of year in that part of the world? If they appear on a daily basis, for instance, that frequency would undercut any inference of a causal connection between the specific sunspot activity observed by the monk and the Korean sighting. And the same problem arises if the frequency of sunspot activity during that period was so great that you could not know whether the aurora borealis observed in Korea resulted from the activity viewed by the monk, or some other sunspot activity.

The question stem identifies this as a Strengthen question. Your prephrase is that the correct answer choice will provide evidence that tends to establish a causal relationship between the sunspot activity observed by the monk and the aurora borealis observed in Korea, rather than just a generalized correlation between sunspot activity and the appearance of an aurora borealis.

Answer choice (A): The appearance of an aurora borealis even in the absence of sunspot activity would weaken the conclusion. Evidence that the purported effect occurs even in the absence of the alleged cause undermines the assertion of a causal relationship.

Answer choice (B): This historical information regarding Chinese sightings of sunspots is irrelevant to the question of whether the English monk’s sighting of sunspot activity on a certain date is confirmed by the Korean sighting of an aurora borealis five days later.

Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice, because it provides evidence that the aurora borealis observed in Korea must have been caused by heavy sunspot activity. While this information does not prove that the aurora borealis was caused by the specific sunspot activity reported by the monk, and does not prove that the monk actually observed sunspot activity, it does support the existence of a causal relationship between sunspot activity and that particular aurora borealis.

Answer choice (D): This answer choice provides details about how the monk would have observed the sunspots, but fails to tie together more strongly the monk’s observation with the appearance of the aurora borealis over Korea.

Answer choice (E): Assuming that the monk’s drawing accurately depicted sunspot activity, his drawing may provide some confirmation of his sighting. However, this additional confirmation source is irrelevant to the conclusion, which stated that the Korean sighting helps to confirm the monk’s account. Any other type of confirmation is irrelevant to the conclusion.
 mmarvakova
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#14635
The correct answer is C, however I do not understand why/how C strengthens the argument.

Should I assume that since the monk is "an English monk" he is located in England? It seems like a great distraction. If he is in England and observed the sunspots in England, than we need an answer that would connect the sunspots in England and the borealis in Korea. My guess was A, which of course turned out to be false.

How does C help the argument? I do not see it.

Thank you.
 Robert Carroll
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#14637
m,

In this stimulus, the author connects two events - sunspot activity and subsequent aurora borealis. The author believes that the observed aurora borealis in Korea confirms the earlier sunspot observation, so the author imputes a casual relationship to the sequence of events - sunspots caused aurora borealis. However, even if we know that sunspots cause aurora borealis, we don't know that sunspots are the only cause of aurora borealis. In any causal argument, we can strengthen the conclusion by showing that there is no alternative cause for the effect.

If we could show that the aurora borealis has no other cause than sunspot activity, then the author would be right that these two events are connected.

Answer choice (C), if true, allows us to infer that the observation of sunspots as far south as Korea means there must have been heavy sunspot activity. If the effect (low-latitude aurora borealis) of heavy sunspot activity was observed, and there is no other possible cause for that effect, then there must really have been heavy sunspot activity. So John of Worcester's reported sighting of unusually large sunspots occurred just at the time when we had independent evidence of an effect of heavy sunspot activity - so John was probably right! This answer choice strengthens the argument by showing that what John claimed to have seen was the only possible cause of the separate event observed in Korea.

You don't need to assume that John is located in England, although you have no reason to doubt that an English monk is located in England. The geographical information is meant, if anything, to show that it's pretty unlikely John communicated with the people in Korea, so these are probably events with only an astronomical connection, not events that were observed by the same people.

Answer choice (A) actually weakens the argument by showing that the effect (aurora borealis) can occur without the supposed cause (sunspots).

Robert Carroll
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 gingerale
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#84613
I missed the implication of a causal relationship in the stimulus. What are the indicators and how can I work on spotting them in future questions?
 Jeremy Press
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#84655
Hi gingerale,

A few things to watch for to identify causal reasoning in an argument:

First, check for the "indicator" words of causal reasoning (you'll find these in the Causal Reasoning discussion in the Logical Reasoning bible, as well as in Lesson 3 of the online course book). This stimulus is quite subtle, because it doesn't have any of those traditional indicator words.

Second, think about whether the logical features of causal relationships are being discussed in any way in the stimulus. There are two primary ones to watch for: a time relationship (true causes always precede their effects); and a force relationship (a cause "forces" its effect into existence; i.e. it brings it about). This stimulus includes a reference to one of these logical features. Part of the evidence for the conclusion is the observation that sunspots are "typically followed" by aurora borealis. Indeed, it uses this time relationship to imply a causal relationship between John of Worcester's sunspots and the Korean aurora.

Third, think about the subject matter context for the argument. Arguments about science and nature often reduce to cause and effect arguments. This makes sense, because it's the nature of science to look for explanations (causes) of the unusual or significant things we observe (effects). When I start seeing a science/nature topic in a Logical Reasoning stimulus, my "spidey sense" is on the lookout for causal reasoning. That factor is absolutely on display here. Why did southern Korea have an aurora five days after John of Worcester's sunspots? Or why does the Korean sighting help confirm John's sighting? The author is assuming cause and effect. The author implies the Korean aurora was caused by (explained by) John's sunspots.

I hope this helps!
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 gingerale
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#84747
Thanks Jeremy!
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 queenbee
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#97954
Hi
I thought the main point of this question was to further strengthen that John W saw the sun spots: "Thus the Korean sighting helps confirm John W's sighting". What else would confirm this? In my view, a written record. The fact that only a heavy sun spot activity would have lead to the sighting as low as Korea doesnt mean that John W. saw it. It just means that it happened. Why isn't a written record, in 1128 no less, a better strengthen?
Thank you
 Luke Haqq
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#98302
Hi queenbee!

Happy to break this one down for you.

I thought the main point of this question was to further strengthen that John W saw the sun spots: "Thus the Korean sighting helps confirm John W's sighting".
The conclusion of the argument is the final sentence of the stimulus: "Thus, the Korean sighting helps to confirm John of Worcester’s sighting." Rather than strengthening "that John W saw the sun spots," we're instead asked to strengthen the claim that the Korean sighting is evidence that "helps to confirm" John's sighting. So it's not just about his having seen sunspots, but rather the value of specific evidence that we are asked to strengthen. We want to bolster the claim that the Korean sighting confirms John's sighting.

Answer choice (C) does this by excluding alternative explanations. That answer choice states, "Only heavy sunspot activity could have resulted in an aurora borealis viewable at a latitude as low as that of Korea." In other words, this answer strengthens it by ruling out the possibility that the sighting in Korea actually originated from some other cause--if it had been caused by something else, then the Korean sighting would not "help to confirm" John's sighting. Answer choice (C) strengthens it by eliminating this possibility.

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