- Mon Nov 05, 2018 6:13 pm
#60161
Hi Rahim,
It looks like you're trying to take a contrapositive of a causal relationship, which we can't logically do. You're correct in that low levels of capthepsin C causes gum disease, and is the only cause given. From this, we can infer that the author definitely believes (E), that removing the cause (low level of capthepsin C) will then remove the effect as well (gum disease). However, do we know that the author believes this is the only way? What if a mouthwash were created that had a similar effect as raising CC to normal levels, but it used different substances to do it? It's still a possibility, as it's not excluded by anything in the stimulus.
The quickest and easiest way to eliminate (A), however, is to use the Assumption Negation technique: negate the answer choice, and see if that would lead logically to the negation of the conclusion as well. Here we would have:
"Restoring CC to normal levels is not the only way to eliminate periodontitis"
"Even after restoring CC to normal levels, we still will not be able to eliminate periodontitis"
This clearly doesn't make any sense. Contrast this to the negation of (E):
"A person whose cathepsin C level has been restored to normal will suffer from periodontitis."
"Even after restoring CC to normal levels, we still will not be able to eliminate periodontitis"
This flows perfectly, making it the correct answer choice.
Hope this clears things up!
It looks like you're trying to take a contrapositive of a causal relationship, which we can't logically do. You're correct in that low levels of capthepsin C causes gum disease, and is the only cause given. From this, we can infer that the author definitely believes (E), that removing the cause (low level of capthepsin C) will then remove the effect as well (gum disease). However, do we know that the author believes this is the only way? What if a mouthwash were created that had a similar effect as raising CC to normal levels, but it used different substances to do it? It's still a possibility, as it's not excluded by anything in the stimulus.
The quickest and easiest way to eliminate (A), however, is to use the Assumption Negation technique: negate the answer choice, and see if that would lead logically to the negation of the conclusion as well. Here we would have:
"Restoring CC to normal levels is not the only way to eliminate periodontitis"
"Even after restoring CC to normal levels, we still will not be able to eliminate periodontitis"
This clearly doesn't make any sense. Contrast this to the negation of (E):
"A person whose cathepsin C level has been restored to normal will suffer from periodontitis."
"Even after restoring CC to normal levels, we still will not be able to eliminate periodontitis"
This flows perfectly, making it the correct answer choice.
Hope this clears things up!