- Fri Jan 21, 2011 12:00 am
#24516
Complete Question Explanation
Resolve the Paradox. The correct answer choice is (E)
The paradox presented in this case is as follows: pipe and cigar smokers enjoy lower health risks than cigarette smokers. Yet when cigarette smokers take up smoking pipes or cigars, they maintain their level of health risks rather than gain significant benefits, as we might expect them to, like cigarette smokers who quit altogether.
The stimulus is followed by a Resolve question, so we need to find the answer choice which best resolves the discrepancy between the full quitters and those who switched to pipes and cigars. The correct answer choice will likely provide some way to distinguish regular pipe/cigar smokers from those who have crossed over from cigarettes.
Answer choice (A): While pipes and cigars are not risk-free, they still generally bring lower risks than cigarettes do. Since the discrepancy remains even with this information, this answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (B): Since this answer choice does not provide any information about those who switch from cigarettes to pipes and cigars, it cannot resolve the discrepancy from the stimulus and cannot be the correct answer choice.
Answer choice (C): The fact that these illnesses arise at the same time provides no distinction between the two relevant groups. Specifically, this choice does not explain why ex-cigarette smokers experience greater risks when taking up pipes and cigars than those pipe and cigar smokers who never smoked cigarettes.
Answer choice (D): Smokers’ tendency to be loyal to one smoking medium at a time does not resolve the discrepancy in the stimulus, as it fails to explain how pipe and cigar smoke appear to have different effect depending on whether one has crossed over from cigarettes.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. This choice provides insight into how ex-cigarette smokers can somehow extract greater risk from pipes and cigars than regular pipe and cigar smokers. If ex-cigarette smokers inhale pipe and cigar smoke, and this is different from those who never smoked cigarettes, then this explains how cigarette smokers are able to maintain their health risks when they switch to the normally less dangerous pipes and cigars.
Resolve the Paradox. The correct answer choice is (E)
The paradox presented in this case is as follows: pipe and cigar smokers enjoy lower health risks than cigarette smokers. Yet when cigarette smokers take up smoking pipes or cigars, they maintain their level of health risks rather than gain significant benefits, as we might expect them to, like cigarette smokers who quit altogether.
The stimulus is followed by a Resolve question, so we need to find the answer choice which best resolves the discrepancy between the full quitters and those who switched to pipes and cigars. The correct answer choice will likely provide some way to distinguish regular pipe/cigar smokers from those who have crossed over from cigarettes.
Answer choice (A): While pipes and cigars are not risk-free, they still generally bring lower risks than cigarettes do. Since the discrepancy remains even with this information, this answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (B): Since this answer choice does not provide any information about those who switch from cigarettes to pipes and cigars, it cannot resolve the discrepancy from the stimulus and cannot be the correct answer choice.
Answer choice (C): The fact that these illnesses arise at the same time provides no distinction between the two relevant groups. Specifically, this choice does not explain why ex-cigarette smokers experience greater risks when taking up pipes and cigars than those pipe and cigar smokers who never smoked cigarettes.
Answer choice (D): Smokers’ tendency to be loyal to one smoking medium at a time does not resolve the discrepancy in the stimulus, as it fails to explain how pipe and cigar smoke appear to have different effect depending on whether one has crossed over from cigarettes.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. This choice provides insight into how ex-cigarette smokers can somehow extract greater risk from pipes and cigars than regular pipe and cigar smokers. If ex-cigarette smokers inhale pipe and cigar smoke, and this is different from those who never smoked cigarettes, then this explains how cigarette smokers are able to maintain their health risks when they switch to the normally less dangerous pipes and cigars.