- Sat Jul 01, 2017 10:26 am
#36702
Complete Question Explanation
Strengthen, CE. The correct answer choice is (A)
The conclusion of the argument suggests that having a perfect pitch is a consequence of genetic
factors:
The relationship between premise and conclusion is a causal one, which can be diagrammed as:
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice, as it strengthens the argument by eliminating an alternate cause for the stated effect. If people who have relatives with perfect pitch are no more likely to receive superior musical training, their perfect pitch cannot be the result of such training. Note that this answer choice does not prove the cause and effect relationship—it is still possible that other causes could account for the stated effect. In Strengthen questions, your choice should be based upon a comparative analysis between the five answer choices, and the correct answer choice does not have to prove the conclusion 100% to be correct.
Answer choice (B): Whether the researchers conducting the study had perfect pitch is irrelevant to our evaluation of the study’s conclusion. This answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (C): Discussing the implications of the stated effect (perfect pitch) is a digression that neither strengthens nor weakens the causal argument.
Answer choice (D): This Opposite answer hurts the argument by suggesting that children whose parents have perfect pitch receive more musical training, and may develop perfect pitch as a result of such training. Because alternate causes weaken the argument, this type of wrong answer choice appears frequently in Strengthen questions.
Answer choice (E): If anything, this answer may hurt the argument by showing that having perfect pitch is also correlated with (and may thus be the result of) musical training. However, because we do not know if such training is the result of having relatives who have perfect pitch, this answer does not contribute to the causal explanation of the correlation cited by the study.
Strengthen, CE. The correct answer choice is (A)
The conclusion of the argument suggests that having a perfect pitch is a consequence of genetic
factors:
- Premise: A person who has perfect pitch has a higher chance of being related to someone else who has it than a person without perfect pitch
Conclusion: Having a perfect pitch is a consequence of genetic factors
The relationship between premise and conclusion is a causal one, which can be diagrammed as:
- GF = genetic factors
PF = perfect pitch
C E
GF PF
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice, as it strengthens the argument by eliminating an alternate cause for the stated effect. If people who have relatives with perfect pitch are no more likely to receive superior musical training, their perfect pitch cannot be the result of such training. Note that this answer choice does not prove the cause and effect relationship—it is still possible that other causes could account for the stated effect. In Strengthen questions, your choice should be based upon a comparative analysis between the five answer choices, and the correct answer choice does not have to prove the conclusion 100% to be correct.
Answer choice (B): Whether the researchers conducting the study had perfect pitch is irrelevant to our evaluation of the study’s conclusion. This answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (C): Discussing the implications of the stated effect (perfect pitch) is a digression that neither strengthens nor weakens the causal argument.
Answer choice (D): This Opposite answer hurts the argument by suggesting that children whose parents have perfect pitch receive more musical training, and may develop perfect pitch as a result of such training. Because alternate causes weaken the argument, this type of wrong answer choice appears frequently in Strengthen questions.
Answer choice (E): If anything, this answer may hurt the argument by showing that having perfect pitch is also correlated with (and may thus be the result of) musical training. However, because we do not know if such training is the result of having relatives who have perfect pitch, this answer does not contribute to the causal explanation of the correlation cited by the study.