- Thu Apr 14, 2016 2:14 pm
#23058
Complete Question Explanation
Assumption-CE. The correct answer choice is (E)
Again, the author has left huge logical gaps in leaping to the conclusion about bronchial inhalers causing a higher asthma death rate. The question stem asks for a necessary assumption. Note that the correct answer choice will probably not make the argument perfectly air-tight; rather, it will just fill in one of the gaps.
Answer choice (A): This answer choice is not necessary for the argument. Apply the Assumption Negation test: Take the logical opposite of this statement and plug it back into the stimulus. What if urban pollution has doubled in the past decade? This actually would not destroy the author's argument. It is possible that urban pollution has doubled overall, but this is not causally instrumental in causing increased death rates from asthma. (Indeed, as the author points out, asthma death rates have increased even in cities with little or no urban pollution.)
Answer choice (B): First, we should be skeptical because the stimulus does not discuss allergies anywhere. Note that this answer choice is not saying, "Allergies are not the actual cause of increased asthma death rate." That would certainly be a necessary assumption, because it dismisses a possible alternative explanation for the observed increased death rate.
Answer choice (C): The naive approach might be to apply the Assumption Negation test and say to yourself, If bronchial inhalers were safe, then how could they ever lead to death? This might at first glance look like a necessary assumption. However, choice (D) of question 28 suggests one pathway by which bronchial inhalers, even if intrinsically safe per se, could lead to increased asthma death rates. So non-safety of inhalers is not necessary for the author's conclusion.
Answer choice (D): This is not a necessary assumption. If we made this assumption, it actually would not support the conclusion as specifically phrased (explaining the increased death rate from asthma). This assumption explains why increased deaths might happen (from other diseases) among asthma sufferers, but that is not the same as increased death rates from asthma. If we do not make this assumption, there are still other pathways by which bronchial inhalers could lead to asthma death.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. This assumption is absolutely necessary. The author dismissed two possible explanations, then immediately concluded that a third explanation must be correct. In order to make this logical leap, we must assume that no other possible explanation exists.
Assumption-CE. The correct answer choice is (E)
Again, the author has left huge logical gaps in leaping to the conclusion about bronchial inhalers causing a higher asthma death rate. The question stem asks for a necessary assumption. Note that the correct answer choice will probably not make the argument perfectly air-tight; rather, it will just fill in one of the gaps.
Answer choice (A): This answer choice is not necessary for the argument. Apply the Assumption Negation test: Take the logical opposite of this statement and plug it back into the stimulus. What if urban pollution has doubled in the past decade? This actually would not destroy the author's argument. It is possible that urban pollution has doubled overall, but this is not causally instrumental in causing increased death rates from asthma. (Indeed, as the author points out, asthma death rates have increased even in cities with little or no urban pollution.)
Answer choice (B): First, we should be skeptical because the stimulus does not discuss allergies anywhere. Note that this answer choice is not saying, "Allergies are not the actual cause of increased asthma death rate." That would certainly be a necessary assumption, because it dismisses a possible alternative explanation for the observed increased death rate.
Answer choice (C): The naive approach might be to apply the Assumption Negation test and say to yourself, If bronchial inhalers were safe, then how could they ever lead to death? This might at first glance look like a necessary assumption. However, choice (D) of question 28 suggests one pathway by which bronchial inhalers, even if intrinsically safe per se, could lead to increased asthma death rates. So non-safety of inhalers is not necessary for the author's conclusion.
Answer choice (D): This is not a necessary assumption. If we made this assumption, it actually would not support the conclusion as specifically phrased (explaining the increased death rate from asthma). This assumption explains why increased deaths might happen (from other diseases) among asthma sufferers, but that is not the same as increased death rates from asthma. If we do not make this assumption, there are still other pathways by which bronchial inhalers could lead to asthma death.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. This assumption is absolutely necessary. The author dismissed two possible explanations, then immediately concluded that a third explanation must be correct. In order to make this logical leap, we must assume that no other possible explanation exists.