- Fri Jan 21, 2011 12:00 am
#27035
Complete Question Explanation
Assumption. The correct answer choice is (D)
To make a causal argument based on a study or a survey as this stimulus does (concluding that fatty acids found in fish oil cause a lower incidence of heart disease because people in the study who ate fish often are less likely to develop heart disease), an author must assume that the study itself is valid. In this case, the author must assume that the consumption of fish by the people studied was the cause of the lowered incidence of heart disease, and that some other behavior is not the cause.
Answer choice (A): Vegetarianism is never discussed in the stimulus so it is not a necessary component of the argument.
Answer choice (B): This answer choice confuses a number of test takers, but remember that the author concludes that heart disease is simply related to the amount of fish consumed. So whether or not the fish eaters in the study avoided other dietary elements that would increase their chances of heart disease is irrelevant.
Answer choice (C): Again, red meat is not discussed as being related to heart disease in the stimulus, so it cannot be though to be a necessary piece of the author’s argument.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. This answer eliminates a competing potential cause of why the fish eating test subjects have a lower incidence of heart disease: engaging in activities known to augment cardiovascular health.
Answer choice (E): We cannot know that there is a connection between sedentary occupations and heart disease based solely on the stimulus information, so this answer choice is not necessary for the author’s argument to be correct.
Assumption. The correct answer choice is (D)
To make a causal argument based on a study or a survey as this stimulus does (concluding that fatty acids found in fish oil cause a lower incidence of heart disease because people in the study who ate fish often are less likely to develop heart disease), an author must assume that the study itself is valid. In this case, the author must assume that the consumption of fish by the people studied was the cause of the lowered incidence of heart disease, and that some other behavior is not the cause.
Answer choice (A): Vegetarianism is never discussed in the stimulus so it is not a necessary component of the argument.
Answer choice (B): This answer choice confuses a number of test takers, but remember that the author concludes that heart disease is simply related to the amount of fish consumed. So whether or not the fish eaters in the study avoided other dietary elements that would increase their chances of heart disease is irrelevant.
Answer choice (C): Again, red meat is not discussed as being related to heart disease in the stimulus, so it cannot be though to be a necessary piece of the author’s argument.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. This answer eliminates a competing potential cause of why the fish eating test subjects have a lower incidence of heart disease: engaging in activities known to augment cardiovascular health.
Answer choice (E): We cannot know that there is a connection between sedentary occupations and heart disease based solely on the stimulus information, so this answer choice is not necessary for the author’s argument to be correct.