- Fri Jul 29, 2016 11:52 am
#27572
Complete Question Explanation
Weaken-CE. The correct answer choice is (E)
The public should be encouraged to eat foods with lower fat content. “Imitation” has negative connotations, this author points out, arguing that producers should thus be allowed instead to refer to their products as “lite.”
The question that follows requires that you weaken the argument that “lite” be an allowable substitute for “imitation.”
Answer choice (A): The author is primarily concerned with motivating people to eat healthier diets; an additional benefit for manufacturers would not weaken the argument.
Answer choice (B): If “lite” butter will soon be even lower in butterfat, this choice would actually strengthen the author’s argument in favor of the term “lite.”
Answer choice (C): The word “some” is quite weak—it means “one or more,” so this choice provides that there is at least one person who is not deterred by the term imitation—not much effect either way.
Answer choice (D): The argument in the stimulus concerns the use of the term “lite” and its possible tendency to get people to eat less butterfat. The fact that cholesterol is one of many contributing factors does not weaken the author’s argument.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. If the “imitation” label actually drives the majority of people to even lower butterfat products, that seems like a pretty good reason to keep that label, rather than switching to “lite.”
Weaken-CE. The correct answer choice is (E)
The public should be encouraged to eat foods with lower fat content. “Imitation” has negative connotations, this author points out, arguing that producers should thus be allowed instead to refer to their products as “lite.”
The question that follows requires that you weaken the argument that “lite” be an allowable substitute for “imitation.”
Answer choice (A): The author is primarily concerned with motivating people to eat healthier diets; an additional benefit for manufacturers would not weaken the argument.
Answer choice (B): If “lite” butter will soon be even lower in butterfat, this choice would actually strengthen the author’s argument in favor of the term “lite.”
Answer choice (C): The word “some” is quite weak—it means “one or more,” so this choice provides that there is at least one person who is not deterred by the term imitation—not much effect either way.
Answer choice (D): The argument in the stimulus concerns the use of the term “lite” and its possible tendency to get people to eat less butterfat. The fact that cholesterol is one of many contributing factors does not weaken the author’s argument.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. If the “imitation” label actually drives the majority of people to even lower butterfat products, that seems like a pretty good reason to keep that label, rather than switching to “lite.”