- Tue Oct 15, 2013 1:56 pm
#11945
Hi Sherry, thanks for your question.
As with any weaken or stregthen question, the first step is to identify the argument's conclusion. What is the author here trying to prove? Once you know that, you will be looking for an answer that has the greatest impact on that conclusion - in this case, weakening it.
We start off by talking about a study, and so you might immediately start thinking of problems that come up with studies and surveys - did the study control for all other variables? Was there some bias in the way it was constucted or carried out?
In this case, though, the author isn't trying to draw a conclusion based on the study - he is actually trying to discredit the study. His conclusion, in the middle of the stimulus, is that the conclusion drawn by some doctors based on that study is not supported. In other words, he is saying that the study is flawed. He goes on to explain why, telling us that the animlas in the study were not "normal". That may be the cause for your confusion here (and it no doubt confused many others who automatically started looking for answers that would discredit, rather than support, the study). Understanding what the author's conclusion is is crucial to performing well on these questions.
Once you have the right conclusion in mind, your prephrase to weaken the argument might be as simple as "the study was good", or perhaps "it's okay that the animals we studied weren't normal". There's no need to get very complex or too specific with your prephrases (and I understand how that language barrier can hinder you - I have worked with many students in similar situations). Keep it simple, and then ask yourself "which of these answer choices does that?"
Answer A helps us the most here - if North Americans eat more than is optimal, then the animals in the study who also ate more than was optimal until their diets were restricted are a good substitute for North Americans, and the doctors' conclusion (that restricting the diets of North Americans would produce results similar to those seen in the lab animals) IS supported. Remember, our author said those doctors were wrong - Answer A weakens that by saying that the doctors were right after all.
Answer C really has no impact here - we want to show that the study was good, and that the doctors' conclusion was supported (which weakens our author's conclusion - be careful not to confuse those two). The fact that sometimes important studies may be done without using lab animals does nothing to help validate this study or otherwise tell us that our author is wrong.
I hope that helped! Good luck.
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
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