- Mon Aug 25, 2025 2:08 pm
#114135
Hi tkt,
As James mentions in his earlier post (Post #4), the first step in solving a Method of Reasoning question is understanding the reasoning in the argument and prephrasing an abstract description of the reasoning before looking at the specific answers.
Here, the argument is attempting to show that the claim that "scientists are sometimes said to assume that something is not the case until there is proof that it is the case" is false. The conclusion of this argument is "so this characterization of scientists is clearly wrong," and the characterization that is wrong specifically refers to the first sentence in the stimulus.
As for how the argument tries to show the claim is false, the argument uses a hypothetical example of determining whether a food additive is safe or unsafe, and then applies that claim to the hypothetical example. In other words, if the claim that "scientists ... assume that something is not the case until there is proof that it is the case" were true, then, in this hypothetical, it would lead to scientists believing in two ideas that directly contradict each other. Since that result (scientists believing in two ideas that directly contradict each other) would be unlikely, problematic, possibly even absurd, etc., then the original claim cannot be true.
Answer B best captures the description of the reasoning above. The "implausible consequences" refer to scientists believing in two ideas that directly contradict each other, specifically scientists believing that the food additive is both safe and unsafe at the same time, which is a logical contradiction/impossible.