tetsuya0129 wrote: ↑Sun Mar 14, 2021 1:29 am
Hi there,
I was stuck between B and E.
B was very tempting because the manager not only concludes economic consideration as the dictating cause but also denies safety consideration as a possible cause. (Thus, safety concern is a part of its argumentation.) But its reasoning is only a cost-benefit analysis. So my prediction was something like "what about nonnuclear resources were much safer". Yet, what B says is these resources are likely to have safety concerns too. Then the comparison about safety became tied. This is why I eventually went with E.
But I really couldn't see why B is irrelevant given that its wording is "overlooks the possibility that...." and the manager's making it a part of its conclusion.
I would really appreciate it if someone could address my question.
Thank you for your time,
Leon
Hi Leon,
Thanks for the question! Ricky aptly described why this answer is wrong above: "B is wrong because it is completely outside the scope of the stimulus. What does the safety concerns of the non-nuclear plants have to do with why this nuclear plant closed? It doesn't appear that it matters at all." So let's look more closely at that.
Answer choice (B) states that the reasoning, "overlooks the possibility that the sources from which cheap power is available might themselves be subject to safety concerns." But this isn't a comparison between the viability of nuclear vs nonnuclear power, or even a safety comparison between the two. Instead, watch the course of the two arguments in simplified form:
- Activist: Safety concerns caused the closing of the nuclear plant.
Manager: No, it was economic concerns coming from cheaper nonnuclear sources and from costs related to safety.
So, has the manager overlooked the safety issues with nonnuclear plants? I wouldn't say so: it's already been stated that these nonnuclear plants produce cheap power that caused an economic issue for the nuclear plants. So, it's a cost factor that already exists in the pricing and one could say that on that basis it wasn't overlooked.
But let's say you reject the idea in the prior paragraph as being too much of an assumption. Even so, this answer still doesn't matter because the manager is explaining why the
nuclear power plant was closed. Safety issues at a different, nonnuclear plant are irrelevant to the manager's reasoning about why the nuclear power plant closed. One way to see this is to make an analogy using examples we are all a bit more familiar with:
- Activist: This Burger King closed due to health issues.
Manager: No, it was economic concerns coming from cheaper burger places like McDonald's and from costs related to health inspections and protocols.
Answer choice (B): overlooks the possibility that McDonald's might also have safety issues.
As is hopefully clearer, health issues with the McDonald's do not impact the manager's argument about this Burger King.
Thanks!