- Fri Jan 21, 2011 12:00 am
#26428
Complete Question Explanation
Must Be True. The correct answer choice is (B)
This rather unique Must Be True stimulus has Charlene and Olaf arguing over whether the activity of microorganisms metabolizing pollutants does indeed vary based upon temperature fluctuations. Charlene’s argument is that utilizing these microorganisms has its limitations because they become less active when temperature in a given region drops below the normal temperature. Olaf attempts to counter this by comparing the activity of microorganisms in two separate regions with drastic temperature differences (arctic versus subtropical), and noting that their activity is roughly equivalent.
Since the question stem asks you to identify what in Charlene’s argument Olaf misunderstands, it is important to see how Olaf’s argument differs from Charlene’s (obviously the differences in their arguments will be based on his misunderstanding). The most notable difference is that Charlene is discussing temperature variation within a single region, whereas Olaf is concerned with the disparity in temperature of two separate regions. So what has he misunderstood? Since Charlene’s argument is about microorganism activity when a region’s temperature drops below “normal,” it seems that Olaf fails to recognize that she means “normal for a single, geographical place,” as opposed to temperature differences that can exist in geographically isolated environments. Charlene would likely respond to Olaf by saying that microorganisms in both the Arctic and subtropical regions would be less active if the temperature in those individual regions fell below the level that was “normal” for those regions.
Answer choice (A): Olaf does not argue about whether environmental cleanup “relies” on microorganisms, but rather on how these microorganisms are affected by temperature variation.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. As discussed above, Olaf understands “normal” to mean a constant (or universal) temperature across regions, instead of “normal for an individual region.”
Answer choice (C): Both Charlene and Olaf seem to understand “cleanup” to mean using microorganisms to metabolize pollutants.
Answer choice (D): Olaf understands that Charlene uses “limitations” to mean that there are restrictions to the potential overall usefulness of using microorganisms for metabolizing pollutants, and then argues that these limitations do not exist. The misunderstanding is over the evidence Charlene uses to support her point about limitations (that temperature in a region falling below a normal level reduces microbial activity).
Answer choice (E): Both Charlene and Olaf agree on the meaning of the word “active” (as in, how quickly the microbes metabolize pollutants/eat oil), but differ about whether temperature can affect that activity. Charlene says that within a region temperature can have an effect; Olaf misunderstands her point and argues about temperature differences in separate regions.
Must Be True. The correct answer choice is (B)
This rather unique Must Be True stimulus has Charlene and Olaf arguing over whether the activity of microorganisms metabolizing pollutants does indeed vary based upon temperature fluctuations. Charlene’s argument is that utilizing these microorganisms has its limitations because they become less active when temperature in a given region drops below the normal temperature. Olaf attempts to counter this by comparing the activity of microorganisms in two separate regions with drastic temperature differences (arctic versus subtropical), and noting that their activity is roughly equivalent.
Since the question stem asks you to identify what in Charlene’s argument Olaf misunderstands, it is important to see how Olaf’s argument differs from Charlene’s (obviously the differences in their arguments will be based on his misunderstanding). The most notable difference is that Charlene is discussing temperature variation within a single region, whereas Olaf is concerned with the disparity in temperature of two separate regions. So what has he misunderstood? Since Charlene’s argument is about microorganism activity when a region’s temperature drops below “normal,” it seems that Olaf fails to recognize that she means “normal for a single, geographical place,” as opposed to temperature differences that can exist in geographically isolated environments. Charlene would likely respond to Olaf by saying that microorganisms in both the Arctic and subtropical regions would be less active if the temperature in those individual regions fell below the level that was “normal” for those regions.
Answer choice (A): Olaf does not argue about whether environmental cleanup “relies” on microorganisms, but rather on how these microorganisms are affected by temperature variation.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. As discussed above, Olaf understands “normal” to mean a constant (or universal) temperature across regions, instead of “normal for an individual region.”
Answer choice (C): Both Charlene and Olaf seem to understand “cleanup” to mean using microorganisms to metabolize pollutants.
Answer choice (D): Olaf understands that Charlene uses “limitations” to mean that there are restrictions to the potential overall usefulness of using microorganisms for metabolizing pollutants, and then argues that these limitations do not exist. The misunderstanding is over the evidence Charlene uses to support her point about limitations (that temperature in a region falling below a normal level reduces microbial activity).
Answer choice (E): Both Charlene and Olaf agree on the meaning of the word “active” (as in, how quickly the microbes metabolize pollutants/eat oil), but differ about whether temperature can affect that activity. Charlene says that within a region temperature can have an effect; Olaf misunderstands her point and argues about temperature differences in separate regions.