- Fri Feb 17, 2012 6:53 pm
#84233
Complete Question Explanation
Resolve the Paradox. The correct answer choice is (A)
In rough terms, the paradox in the stimulus is that smokers of one pack of low-nicotine cigarettes
have an identical nicotine level at the end of the day as smokers of one pack of high-nicotine
cigarettes. This similarity must be explained by a similarity, not a difference.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer. The answer choice indicates that there is a similarity
in the blood such that the maximum amount of nicotine absorbed is identical for everyone. Because
the maximum amount of nicotine absorbed per day is equal to the amount of nicotine in a pack of
low-nicotine cigarettes, each person absorbs the amount of nicotine equal to that in the low-nicotine
pack regardless of the type of cigarette smoked. Additional nicotine is not absorbed into the blood
of smokers of the high-nicotine brand. Since this answer explains the paradox, this is the correct
answer.
Answer choice (B): Careful here—read closely! The stimulus is specifically about smokers who
“smoke one pack of cigarettes per day.” This very attractive wrong answer discusses smoking
different numbers of cigarettes and thus it fails to meet the circumstances in the stimulus. Thus, this
is a classic case of an answer that fails to address the facts of the stimulus.
Answer choice (C): This answer confuses the issue because it indicates that most nicotine is
absorbed into the system. From this fact one would expect that those smoking high-nicotine
cigarettes would have higher nicotine levels than low-nicotine cigarette smokers.
Answer choice (D): The stimulus does not address the level of tar in cigarettes, nor can we make any
judgment about how tar affects nicotine levels.
Answer choice (E): This would apply to any smoker, and as this addresses an effect that occurs after
smoking is stopped, it does not help us understand why the nicotine rose to identical levels regardless
of the kind of cigarette smoked.
Resolve the Paradox. The correct answer choice is (A)
In rough terms, the paradox in the stimulus is that smokers of one pack of low-nicotine cigarettes
have an identical nicotine level at the end of the day as smokers of one pack of high-nicotine
cigarettes. This similarity must be explained by a similarity, not a difference.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer. The answer choice indicates that there is a similarity
in the blood such that the maximum amount of nicotine absorbed is identical for everyone. Because
the maximum amount of nicotine absorbed per day is equal to the amount of nicotine in a pack of
low-nicotine cigarettes, each person absorbs the amount of nicotine equal to that in the low-nicotine
pack regardless of the type of cigarette smoked. Additional nicotine is not absorbed into the blood
of smokers of the high-nicotine brand. Since this answer explains the paradox, this is the correct
answer.
Answer choice (B): Careful here—read closely! The stimulus is specifically about smokers who
“smoke one pack of cigarettes per day.” This very attractive wrong answer discusses smoking
different numbers of cigarettes and thus it fails to meet the circumstances in the stimulus. Thus, this
is a classic case of an answer that fails to address the facts of the stimulus.
Answer choice (C): This answer confuses the issue because it indicates that most nicotine is
absorbed into the system. From this fact one would expect that those smoking high-nicotine
cigarettes would have higher nicotine levels than low-nicotine cigarette smokers.
Answer choice (D): The stimulus does not address the level of tar in cigarettes, nor can we make any
judgment about how tar affects nicotine levels.
Answer choice (E): This would apply to any smoker, and as this addresses an effect that occurs after
smoking is stopped, it does not help us understand why the nicotine rose to identical levels regardless
of the kind of cigarette smoked.