- Wed Jan 21, 2015 12:00 am
#72966
Complete Question Explanation
Weaken. The correct answer choice is (D).
A geologist tells us that while some people have challenged the dominant view of how petroleum formed, claiming that it came not from living material but from very old deep carbon deposits, those people have to be wrong because petroleum has biomarkers in it, which are the remains of living things. We are then tasked with weakening this claim, which means we have to attack the geologist who is attacking the other people, a potentially mind-bending double negative. To weaken her attack, we want to either 1) strengthen the opposition (by providing evidence that deep carbon, rather than living material, is the source of petroleum), or undermine her evidence (by showing that the presence of biomarkers may not mean what she thinks it means). With that in mind, we can move to the answers - no more specific prephrase should be required.
Answer choice (A): The first answer choice neither supports the deep carbon theory nor challenges the geologist's reliance on those biomarkers, and is therefore a loser. The absence of biomarkers in some fossils tells us nothing about what their presence in petroleum does or does not prove.
Answer choice (B): The fact that living organisms came much later than when those deep carbon deposits formed still tells us nothing about where petroluem did or did not originate, since we don't know how old petroleum is or how long it would have taken to form from either source. This also does nothing to undermine the importance of the biomarkers found in petroleum.
Answer choice (C): Much like answer B, the time it takes for petroleum to form does not, by itself, support the deep carbon theory or weaken the argument based on the presence of biomarkers. Perhaps petroleum formed from living material that is many millions of years old?
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. This answer matches the second part of our prephrase by weakening the value of biomarkers in petroleum as evidence. If bacteria (which are living things, even if they are not plants or animals) are found deep in the earth's crust, down where the deep carbon is, it's possible that petroleum formed from deep carbon and just happened to have captured some living material in it in the process. Their presence in the petroleum tells us nothing about how the petroleum itself formed. This answer is the equivalent of saying that a fly in your soup does not prove that it is not vegetable soup.
Answer choice (E): Don't be distracted by this answer, which deals with the wrong carbon deposits. The author is saying that petroleum could not have formed from deep carbon deposits dating to the earth's formation, because there are biomarkers in petroleum. Any carbon deposits that formed from decaying living material must have been formed long after the formation of the earth, and in any event this answer tells us nothing about whether the "some" deposits mentioned have anything to do with the formation of petroleum.
This argument does have a strong causal element to it, discussed in Dave Killoran's post from November 2018 in this thread, which is worth reading next if this explanation proves insufficient to satisfy your needs.
Weaken. The correct answer choice is (D).
A geologist tells us that while some people have challenged the dominant view of how petroleum formed, claiming that it came not from living material but from very old deep carbon deposits, those people have to be wrong because petroleum has biomarkers in it, which are the remains of living things. We are then tasked with weakening this claim, which means we have to attack the geologist who is attacking the other people, a potentially mind-bending double negative. To weaken her attack, we want to either 1) strengthen the opposition (by providing evidence that deep carbon, rather than living material, is the source of petroleum), or undermine her evidence (by showing that the presence of biomarkers may not mean what she thinks it means). With that in mind, we can move to the answers - no more specific prephrase should be required.
Answer choice (A): The first answer choice neither supports the deep carbon theory nor challenges the geologist's reliance on those biomarkers, and is therefore a loser. The absence of biomarkers in some fossils tells us nothing about what their presence in petroleum does or does not prove.
Answer choice (B): The fact that living organisms came much later than when those deep carbon deposits formed still tells us nothing about where petroluem did or did not originate, since we don't know how old petroleum is or how long it would have taken to form from either source. This also does nothing to undermine the importance of the biomarkers found in petroleum.
Answer choice (C): Much like answer B, the time it takes for petroleum to form does not, by itself, support the deep carbon theory or weaken the argument based on the presence of biomarkers. Perhaps petroleum formed from living material that is many millions of years old?
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. This answer matches the second part of our prephrase by weakening the value of biomarkers in petroleum as evidence. If bacteria (which are living things, even if they are not plants or animals) are found deep in the earth's crust, down where the deep carbon is, it's possible that petroleum formed from deep carbon and just happened to have captured some living material in it in the process. Their presence in the petroleum tells us nothing about how the petroleum itself formed. This answer is the equivalent of saying that a fly in your soup does not prove that it is not vegetable soup.
Answer choice (E): Don't be distracted by this answer, which deals with the wrong carbon deposits. The author is saying that petroleum could not have formed from deep carbon deposits dating to the earth's formation, because there are biomarkers in petroleum. Any carbon deposits that formed from decaying living material must have been formed long after the formation of the earth, and in any event this answer tells us nothing about whether the "some" deposits mentioned have anything to do with the formation of petroleum.
This argument does have a strong causal element to it, discussed in Dave Killoran's post from November 2018 in this thread, which is worth reading next if this explanation proves insufficient to satisfy your needs.