- Fri Jan 21, 2011 12:00 am
#24359
Complete Question Explanation
Weaken. The correct answer choice is (B)
The official states that when trees decompose, they release carbon dioxide. He also explains that rapidly-growing younger trees absorb more carbon dioxide than do older trees. On that basis, he concludes that logging for manufacture would reduce carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere.
While you may legitimately propose that the argument makes other assumptions, at the most essential level the reasoning implies that the official assumes that the younger trees will be able absorb more than the logged trees release.
That is important, because a logged tree may decompose and quickly release the carbon dioxide it has accumulated over many years, thus making a higher yearly absorption rate fairly insignificant in the face of such a glut of carbon dioxide. Since you are asked to weaken the stimulus, you should focus on that possibility.
Answer choice (A): Since the argument merely concerns carbon dioxide levels, responses about whether animals will die are wholly irrelevant.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. If much of the organic matter from old-growth trees is made into products that decompose rapidly, that offers reason to believe that much of the accumulated carbon dioxide from an older tree will be rapidly released, which challenges the idea that a younger tree’s absorption rate will be able to counter the glut of carbon dioxide that has been quickly released.
Answer choice (C): From the stimulus, one would expect a younger tree to have much less stored carbon dioxide. The stimulus was based, however, on what the young trees will absorb if they are able to grow, not on what they have stored, so this choice is wrong. Remember, the stimulus did not directly concern whether it is better to harvest older trees than it is to harvest younger trees.
Answer choice (D): This choice does not weaken the argument, because it merely observes that debris in the forest decomposes and releases carbon dioxide. That basically is a restatement of the stimulus, which points out that when large trees decompose they release stored carbon dioxide. You need to show why that consideration might not lead to the conclusion that it is better to log old trees than to let them eventually die.
Answer choice (E): This choice suggests that it can take newly planted trees many years to reach the size of older trees. However, that does not challenge the idea that the younger trees will grow rapidly and absorb more carbon dioxide. Some trees are large, so a newly planted tree could grow rapidly but still take a long time to reach the size of an old-growth tree. The stimulus states that rapidly-growing trees absorb more carbon dioxide, so the idea that trees might grow rapidly, or have rapid-growth phases, for a long time before reaching the size of old-growth trees strengthens rather than weakens the stimulus.
Weaken. The correct answer choice is (B)
The official states that when trees decompose, they release carbon dioxide. He also explains that rapidly-growing younger trees absorb more carbon dioxide than do older trees. On that basis, he concludes that logging for manufacture would reduce carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere.
While you may legitimately propose that the argument makes other assumptions, at the most essential level the reasoning implies that the official assumes that the younger trees will be able absorb more than the logged trees release.
That is important, because a logged tree may decompose and quickly release the carbon dioxide it has accumulated over many years, thus making a higher yearly absorption rate fairly insignificant in the face of such a glut of carbon dioxide. Since you are asked to weaken the stimulus, you should focus on that possibility.
Answer choice (A): Since the argument merely concerns carbon dioxide levels, responses about whether animals will die are wholly irrelevant.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. If much of the organic matter from old-growth trees is made into products that decompose rapidly, that offers reason to believe that much of the accumulated carbon dioxide from an older tree will be rapidly released, which challenges the idea that a younger tree’s absorption rate will be able to counter the glut of carbon dioxide that has been quickly released.
Answer choice (C): From the stimulus, one would expect a younger tree to have much less stored carbon dioxide. The stimulus was based, however, on what the young trees will absorb if they are able to grow, not on what they have stored, so this choice is wrong. Remember, the stimulus did not directly concern whether it is better to harvest older trees than it is to harvest younger trees.
Answer choice (D): This choice does not weaken the argument, because it merely observes that debris in the forest decomposes and releases carbon dioxide. That basically is a restatement of the stimulus, which points out that when large trees decompose they release stored carbon dioxide. You need to show why that consideration might not lead to the conclusion that it is better to log old trees than to let them eventually die.
Answer choice (E): This choice suggests that it can take newly planted trees many years to reach the size of older trees. However, that does not challenge the idea that the younger trees will grow rapidly and absorb more carbon dioxide. Some trees are large, so a newly planted tree could grow rapidly but still take a long time to reach the size of an old-growth tree. The stimulus states that rapidly-growing trees absorb more carbon dioxide, so the idea that trees might grow rapidly, or have rapid-growth phases, for a long time before reaching the size of old-growth trees strengthens rather than weakens the stimulus.