- Sun Aug 06, 2017 3:10 pm
#38008
This question introduces conditional logic in order to explain when medical research should be permitted. I believe we would diagram it like this:
Likely to reveal info about a medical condition
Medical Research Permitted and
Known to pose a minimal risk to subjects
Therefore, in order to justify the argument that the researcher's study should be prohibited, we merely need to show that one of the necessary conditions has not been met, which in turn negates the sufficient, making the medical research not permitted.
Doesn't answer choice D fulfill this requirement by negating the necessary condition that the research must be likely to reveal info about a medical condition? If hormonal imbalances are not a medical condition, they aren't able to reveal any important info about a medical condition.
Likely to reveal info about a medical condition
Medical Research Permitted and
Known to pose a minimal risk to subjects
Therefore, in order to justify the argument that the researcher's study should be prohibited, we merely need to show that one of the necessary conditions has not been met, which in turn negates the sufficient, making the medical research not permitted.
Doesn't answer choice D fulfill this requirement by negating the necessary condition that the research must be likely to reveal info about a medical condition? If hormonal imbalances are not a medical condition, they aren't able to reveal any important info about a medical condition.