- Fri Jan 21, 2011 12:00 am
#26519
Complete Question Explanation
Weaken—#%. The correct answer choice is (D)
This question, like many that deal with numbers and percentages, can be fairly tricky. The author’s conclusion is that CXC has become more virulent (strong, in viral terms) over the past five years, but this conclusion is based on questionable reasoning, since the information provided is rather limited. The portion of reported cases which end in death has increased. Without knowing how many cases were reported, there is no way to assess the virulence of CXC today versus that of CXC from five years ago. For example, the increased percentage of deaths could be based on a smaller number of reported cases:
Correct answer choice (D) effectively weakens the argument. If, as discussed above, the number of reported cases has decreased, then the increased percentage tells us nothing about the relative virulence of the disease.
Incorrect answer choices (A), (B), and (E) actually strengthen the argument, giving more reason to conclude an increase in CXC virulence. Answer choices (A) and (E) would show that recent CXC is even more virulent that we thought. Answer choice (B) also strengthens the argument, showing that the percentage from five years ago was actually an overestimate (if the percentage from five years ago was lower than previously thought, this would strengthen the argument that there has been an increase in virulence). Answer choice (C) is not relevant; regardless of any recent inoculation program, we are still assessing the same information from the stimulus—the rising percentage of reported case deaths, with or without inoculation.
Weaken—#%. The correct answer choice is (D)
This question, like many that deal with numbers and percentages, can be fairly tricky. The author’s conclusion is that CXC has become more virulent (strong, in viral terms) over the past five years, but this conclusion is based on questionable reasoning, since the information provided is rather limited. The portion of reported cases which end in death has increased. Without knowing how many cases were reported, there is no way to assess the virulence of CXC today versus that of CXC from five years ago. For example, the increased percentage of deaths could be based on a smaller number of reported cases:
- Hypothetical:
Five years ago: 1000 cases reported, 50 die, so this gives a 5% death rate
Today: 100 cases reported, 18 die, giving us an 18% death rate
Correct answer choice (D) effectively weakens the argument. If, as discussed above, the number of reported cases has decreased, then the increased percentage tells us nothing about the relative virulence of the disease.
Incorrect answer choices (A), (B), and (E) actually strengthen the argument, giving more reason to conclude an increase in CXC virulence. Answer choices (A) and (E) would show that recent CXC is even more virulent that we thought. Answer choice (B) also strengthens the argument, showing that the percentage from five years ago was actually an overestimate (if the percentage from five years ago was lower than previously thought, this would strengthen the argument that there has been an increase in virulence). Answer choice (C) is not relevant; regardless of any recent inoculation program, we are still assessing the same information from the stimulus—the rising percentage of reported case deaths, with or without inoculation.