- Wed May 31, 2023 6:42 pm
#101990
Hi bilingli!
To start, there's a bit of speculation going on in the reasoning you provide. There'd need to be more traction and support for this in the stimulus, or a lengthier unpacking of it in the answer choice, for it to resolve the paradox.
More to the point, the paradox is about major leg muscles. The paradox is specifically that the toning shoes themselves don't increase the amount of exercise that major leg muscles receive, yet people who use them still experience strengthening their leg muscles.
Answer choice (A) is about small, underused muscles, and thus on its own is not directly related to the paradox at hand that deals with major leg muscles. It's possible that the two could be related, but again this would need to be spelled out in the answer choice or stimulus.
To start, there's a bit of speculation going on in the reasoning you provide. There'd need to be more traction and support for this in the stimulus, or a lengthier unpacking of it in the answer choice, for it to resolve the paradox.
More to the point, the paradox is about major leg muscles. The paradox is specifically that the toning shoes themselves don't increase the amount of exercise that major leg muscles receive, yet people who use them still experience strengthening their leg muscles.
Answer choice (A) is about small, underused muscles, and thus on its own is not directly related to the paradox at hand that deals with major leg muscles. It's possible that the two could be related, but again this would need to be spelled out in the answer choice or stimulus.