- Mon Mar 21, 2016 7:51 pm
#22563
So the statement is "the natural habitats have not become smaller"
- the fact that this means it hasn't been reduced by humans, is outside information we can assume
but the fact that this means it hasn't been reduced naturally is outside information we can not assume?
The lines are extremely blurred for me still.
Also, we're assuming the answer choices to be true (2nd family)
so if we are to assume indeed that "the natural habitats have not become smaller", that still 'definitely' rules out the 'maybe' possibility of the functioning darwin theory, meaning that if the habitats have not become smaller then there is room to believe that amphibians have not declined at all and that completely disproves the stimulus. Irrespective of the background of how or why it's true, the fact that it's true that it has not become smaller (we are told to assume as true) should suffice to encompass the natural possibility among all it's possibilities of why, and thus completely discount that theory (the theory that could weaken it).
Robert Carroll wrote:elbism,Another thing - if this is outside information that we can't bring in, that should also include the real reason this answer is incorrect which is, as stated in the powerscore book, that it hasn't been destroyed by humans or some other source. Is that not outside information that we are supposed to have attached to this idea that it 'hasn't gotten smaller'? Because the human desecration was not my knee-jerk response, it was the natural decline concept. My question is, I suppose, does the concept of 'outside information' not pertain to relativity?
The information and logic you came up with regarding evolution is interesting, and I'm not qualified to judge it, but I can judge its validity on the test! It's extraneous information that you can't assume - while it may be true in reality, the testmakers don't assume its truth or falsity because it's information brought in from the outside.
Thus, you can't assume that if a species declines, its habitat will also decline. It's simply outside information, a worthy topic for a science class but not something you should use on the LSAT itself.
So, while the natural habitat may or may not be affected by ozone, these amphibians' decline is something the stimulus provides one explanation for - depleted ozone layer - but for which there are multiple alternative explanations. One of those is that the habitat is becoming smaller. As you pointed out, and this IS ok to consider, the habitat may decline because of the depleting ozone layer. On the other hand, it may decline for unrelated reasons. The point is that the habitat's becoming smaller may be a cause unrelated to the ozone layer, which would independently account for the amphibians' decline. Whether or not we can tell that it is independent, its very possibility makes it tough to say whether the author of the stimulus is right that the depleted ozone layer is the primary cause of the amphibians' decline. Because of that uncertainty, we'd feel a lot better about the conclusion if we could just get rid of the alternative explanation entirely - and that's what answer choice (D) does.
Robert Carroll
So the statement is "the natural habitats have not become smaller"
- the fact that this means it hasn't been reduced by humans, is outside information we can assume
but the fact that this means it hasn't been reduced naturally is outside information we can not assume?
The lines are extremely blurred for me still.
Also, we're assuming the answer choices to be true (2nd family)
so if we are to assume indeed that "the natural habitats have not become smaller", that still 'definitely' rules out the 'maybe' possibility of the functioning darwin theory, meaning that if the habitats have not become smaller then there is room to believe that amphibians have not declined at all and that completely disproves the stimulus. Irrespective of the background of how or why it's true, the fact that it's true that it has not become smaller (we are told to assume as true) should suffice to encompass the natural possibility among all it's possibilities of why, and thus completely discount that theory (the theory that could weaken it).