- Sat Jan 21, 2012 12:00 am
#25005
Complete Question Explanation
Weaken. The correct answer choice is (B)
This stimulus argues in favor of the actions of a local city council in hiring a long-term economic development advisor. The columnist remarks that near-by cities that have invested in long-term economic development have seen results from their investments. Therefore, the columnist concludes that the city council should be praised for making a strong investment. In Weaken questions without causal reasoning, you can often weaken the argument by attacking the link between the premise(s) and the conclusion. Here, the author supports the conclusion in two main ways. First, the columnists draws an analogy between long-term economic planning and preventative car maintenance, implying that just as preventative maintenance pays off in the long run, so too will the economic investment. Second, he or she remarks that other local cities have benefited from similar long-term planning and investment. To Weaken the argument, we will want to argue that the actions of the local city-council are in some way importantly different from the cases the columnist tries to cite for comparison.
Answer choice (A): This answer choice is not inconsistent with the facts of the analogy, and it does not serve to attack the link between the analogy and the conclusion. The columnist stated that “almost all” preventative maintenance pays off in the long run, and not that it would necessarily pay off in every case. Further, the cars could still require expensive repairs, so long as the repairs were less than what would have been required in the absence of the maintenance. Therefore, this answer choice does not weaken the columnists’ argument.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. The columnist’s argument is supported by comparing the actions of the city-council to the actions of city-councils in neighboring cities. By differentiating the columnist’s city from the neighboring cities, this answer choice suggests that the author’s city may not see the same positive results from the investment in long-term economic development as the neighboring cities did.
Answer choice (C): The discussion of car maintenance was just an analogy. The reasons behind why people chose not to perform maintenance on their cars are irrelevant to the issue of if it would be valuable to perform the maintenance in the long run.
Answer choice (D): In this stimulus, the city has already acted and hired an advisor. Therefore, it is not relevant that some cities cannot afford to hire an advisor as this city already has.
Answer choice (E): The conclusion of the stimulus is that the investment will pay off in several years. This answer choice does not impact that conclusion because the conclusion allows for there to be a time lag between the investment and the positive results.
Weaken. The correct answer choice is (B)
This stimulus argues in favor of the actions of a local city council in hiring a long-term economic development advisor. The columnist remarks that near-by cities that have invested in long-term economic development have seen results from their investments. Therefore, the columnist concludes that the city council should be praised for making a strong investment. In Weaken questions without causal reasoning, you can often weaken the argument by attacking the link between the premise(s) and the conclusion. Here, the author supports the conclusion in two main ways. First, the columnists draws an analogy between long-term economic planning and preventative car maintenance, implying that just as preventative maintenance pays off in the long run, so too will the economic investment. Second, he or she remarks that other local cities have benefited from similar long-term planning and investment. To Weaken the argument, we will want to argue that the actions of the local city-council are in some way importantly different from the cases the columnist tries to cite for comparison.
Answer choice (A): This answer choice is not inconsistent with the facts of the analogy, and it does not serve to attack the link between the analogy and the conclusion. The columnist stated that “almost all” preventative maintenance pays off in the long run, and not that it would necessarily pay off in every case. Further, the cars could still require expensive repairs, so long as the repairs were less than what would have been required in the absence of the maintenance. Therefore, this answer choice does not weaken the columnists’ argument.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. The columnist’s argument is supported by comparing the actions of the city-council to the actions of city-councils in neighboring cities. By differentiating the columnist’s city from the neighboring cities, this answer choice suggests that the author’s city may not see the same positive results from the investment in long-term economic development as the neighboring cities did.
Answer choice (C): The discussion of car maintenance was just an analogy. The reasons behind why people chose not to perform maintenance on their cars are irrelevant to the issue of if it would be valuable to perform the maintenance in the long run.
Answer choice (D): In this stimulus, the city has already acted and hired an advisor. Therefore, it is not relevant that some cities cannot afford to hire an advisor as this city already has.
Answer choice (E): The conclusion of the stimulus is that the investment will pay off in several years. This answer choice does not impact that conclusion because the conclusion allows for there to be a time lag between the investment and the positive results.