- Sat Aug 29, 2015 11:00 pm
#22674
Red admiral butterflies fly in a highly irregular fashion, a behavior that scientists interpret as a means of avoiding predation. After all, the red admiral is not a poisonous butterfly, so it needs to elude predators to survive.
Since the conclusion contains an explanation for an observed phenomenon, the reasoning is causal and can be diagrammed as follows:
Avoid predation (cause) Irregular flight style (effect)
The argument makes a number of questionable assumptions. While the flight style of the red admiral may not be energy efficient, maybe it has some other purpose. Or perhaps it has no purpose at all, and the red admiral is desperately in need of medication to manage an attention deficit disorder. Who knows? Alternatively, what if all butterflies fly in a highly irregular fashion, and the behavior observed is not unique to nonpoisonous butterflies? For the conclusion to be strengthened, the correct answer choice must establish a stronger connection between the irregular flight style of the red admiral and the purpose of avoiding predation.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice. If poisonous butterflies do not have the same irregular flight style as the red admiral, then the observed behavior is unique to those butterflies that need to avoid predation. While this does not prove the conclusion, it certainly strengthens it by showing that where the cause does not occur (poisonous butterflies do not need to avoid predation), the effect does not occur (their flight style is not irregular).
Answer choice (B): This answer choice does not help explain why the red admiral has an irregular flight style, and therefore cannot strengthen the causal relationship in the conclusion.
Answer choice (C): This is the Opposite answer. If many other types of butterfly have flight styles similar to that of the red admiral, then the behavior is not necessarily unique to nonpoisonous butterflies. This answer choice suggests that the irregular flight style of the red admiral may have some other purpose (or no purpose at all), weakening the conclusion of the argument.
Answer choice (D): We know that the red admiral’s flight style is not energy efficient (last sentence). Just because it would be even less efficient for heavier varieties of insects has no bearing on the argument at hand.
Answer choice (E): Whether the predators that prey on the red admiral also prey on other species of nonpoisonous butterflies has no bearing on the causal relationship that underlies the argument. Even if some predators preyed exclusively on the red admiral, the irregular flight style of the butterfly could still be a means of avoiding predation.
Since the conclusion contains an explanation for an observed phenomenon, the reasoning is causal and can be diagrammed as follows:
Avoid predation (cause) Irregular flight style (effect)
The argument makes a number of questionable assumptions. While the flight style of the red admiral may not be energy efficient, maybe it has some other purpose. Or perhaps it has no purpose at all, and the red admiral is desperately in need of medication to manage an attention deficit disorder. Who knows? Alternatively, what if all butterflies fly in a highly irregular fashion, and the behavior observed is not unique to nonpoisonous butterflies? For the conclusion to be strengthened, the correct answer choice must establish a stronger connection between the irregular flight style of the red admiral and the purpose of avoiding predation.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice. If poisonous butterflies do not have the same irregular flight style as the red admiral, then the observed behavior is unique to those butterflies that need to avoid predation. While this does not prove the conclusion, it certainly strengthens it by showing that where the cause does not occur (poisonous butterflies do not need to avoid predation), the effect does not occur (their flight style is not irregular).
Answer choice (B): This answer choice does not help explain why the red admiral has an irregular flight style, and therefore cannot strengthen the causal relationship in the conclusion.
Answer choice (C): This is the Opposite answer. If many other types of butterfly have flight styles similar to that of the red admiral, then the behavior is not necessarily unique to nonpoisonous butterflies. This answer choice suggests that the irregular flight style of the red admiral may have some other purpose (or no purpose at all), weakening the conclusion of the argument.
Answer choice (D): We know that the red admiral’s flight style is not energy efficient (last sentence). Just because it would be even less efficient for heavier varieties of insects has no bearing on the argument at hand.
Answer choice (E): Whether the predators that prey on the red admiral also prey on other species of nonpoisonous butterflies has no bearing on the causal relationship that underlies the argument. Even if some predators preyed exclusively on the red admiral, the irregular flight style of the butterfly could still be a means of avoiding predation.