- Fri Jul 02, 2021 4:08 pm
#88442
Gayusom,
The stimulus is a cause and effect argument. We have the fact that the Akabe drink only small amounts of a certain tea in the morning. It seems pretty clear that this is a fact, not subject to any doubt, but that the explanation for why the Akabe do that is subject to some dispute. Anthropologists hypothesize that the Akabe drink little in the morning because the high caffeine content would destroy their surefootedness.
In short, the anthropologists think "avoidance of high caffeine content that would destroy surefootedness" is the cause and "taking only small amounts of the tea in the morning" is the effect.
As with any cause and effect argument, we can weaken it by positing some other cause for the effect.
Answer choice (C), the correct answer, has been pretty well discussed in this thread, but if you have any further questions about it, let us know. Adam's post above yours does a great job on answer choice (B), also. So I'll cover the others.
Answer choice (A) brings up another reason to drink the tea, but certainly not a reason to avoid drinking it in large amounts in the morning. If the nutrients were essential, why limit consumption? It's a mystery.
Answer choice (D) has an unclear effect on the argument. Why aren't children introduced to it in large amounts? Because of the caffeine? Some other reason? We have no idea how this could affect the argument.
Answer choice (E) shows that the Akabe drink much more when celebrating. Well, when celebrating, do they need to be surefooted? Probably not. You might object "How do you know they don't have to be surefooted during celebrations?" I truly don't know. But I don't know that they do have to be surefooted during celebrations. So I don't know how this fits into the argument. I can't say it weakens if it has no effect.
Robert Carroll
The stimulus is a cause and effect argument. We have the fact that the Akabe drink only small amounts of a certain tea in the morning. It seems pretty clear that this is a fact, not subject to any doubt, but that the explanation for why the Akabe do that is subject to some dispute. Anthropologists hypothesize that the Akabe drink little in the morning because the high caffeine content would destroy their surefootedness.
In short, the anthropologists think "avoidance of high caffeine content that would destroy surefootedness" is the cause and "taking only small amounts of the tea in the morning" is the effect.
As with any cause and effect argument, we can weaken it by positing some other cause for the effect.
Answer choice (C), the correct answer, has been pretty well discussed in this thread, but if you have any further questions about it, let us know. Adam's post above yours does a great job on answer choice (B), also. So I'll cover the others.
Answer choice (A) brings up another reason to drink the tea, but certainly not a reason to avoid drinking it in large amounts in the morning. If the nutrients were essential, why limit consumption? It's a mystery.
Answer choice (D) has an unclear effect on the argument. Why aren't children introduced to it in large amounts? Because of the caffeine? Some other reason? We have no idea how this could affect the argument.
Answer choice (E) shows that the Akabe drink much more when celebrating. Well, when celebrating, do they need to be surefooted? Probably not. You might object "How do you know they don't have to be surefooted during celebrations?" I truly don't know. But I don't know that they do have to be surefooted during celebrations. So I don't know how this fits into the argument. I can't say it weakens if it has no effect.
Robert Carroll