- Thu Jan 21, 2016 12:00 am
#72933
Complete Question Explanation
Weaken. The correct answer choice is (A).
The argument gives us three premises: 1) Grapefruit juice boosts the performance of some medicines; 2) the wrong dose of medicine can be dangerous; 3) taking the lowest effective dose is best. Based on these premises, the author concludes that the best course of action would be to take lower doses of the medicine, plus a prescribed amount of grapefruit juice (presumably to boost the medicine to an effective level). The stem asks us to undermine that argument, which means we need new information in the correct answer that would raise some doubts about that practice (low does plus grapefruit juice) being the best choice.
A broad prephrase here would be good, something like "there is some problem with taking grapefruit juice with these medicines" or "another option might be better." No need to get more specific than that or to pinpoint what the exact problem would be. All we have to do is raise doubts about this being the best approach, so ANY problem with the approach or possible better alternative should do the trick.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice. Here we are presented with a potential problem with the suggested approach. If the amount of the chemical in grapefruit juice is unpredictable, we might boost the medicine too much, or too little. Prescribed amounts of juice would have varying levels of the chemical and thus potentially varying levels of effect. Not what you want from your medicine!
Answer choice (B): If grapefruit juice is less expensive than the medicine, then this approach is not only potentially better for medical reasons, but also for economic reasons. That makes this answer a Strengthener, the opposite of what we want.
Answer choice (C): This answer has no effect on the argument. We already knew that it was the chemical in the juice, rather than the juice itself, that had the effect, so it's not really new information that removing the chemical (the cause) leads to elimination of the effect.
Answer choice (D): While this answer is very informative and may help us to better understand how and why the effect occurs, it does nothing to undermine the suggested practice. Your reaction to this answer should be "that's fascinating, but that's not a problem."
Answer choice (E): Pointing to the past practices of doctors who didn't know about the chemical does nothing to weaken the claim about the suggested practice. It may be that at some point doctors saw grapefruit juice as a problem, but the proposal is based on having better information now, and those past practices should not raise any doubts about the new proposal.
Weaken. The correct answer choice is (A).
The argument gives us three premises: 1) Grapefruit juice boosts the performance of some medicines; 2) the wrong dose of medicine can be dangerous; 3) taking the lowest effective dose is best. Based on these premises, the author concludes that the best course of action would be to take lower doses of the medicine, plus a prescribed amount of grapefruit juice (presumably to boost the medicine to an effective level). The stem asks us to undermine that argument, which means we need new information in the correct answer that would raise some doubts about that practice (low does plus grapefruit juice) being the best choice.
A broad prephrase here would be good, something like "there is some problem with taking grapefruit juice with these medicines" or "another option might be better." No need to get more specific than that or to pinpoint what the exact problem would be. All we have to do is raise doubts about this being the best approach, so ANY problem with the approach or possible better alternative should do the trick.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice. Here we are presented with a potential problem with the suggested approach. If the amount of the chemical in grapefruit juice is unpredictable, we might boost the medicine too much, or too little. Prescribed amounts of juice would have varying levels of the chemical and thus potentially varying levels of effect. Not what you want from your medicine!
Answer choice (B): If grapefruit juice is less expensive than the medicine, then this approach is not only potentially better for medical reasons, but also for economic reasons. That makes this answer a Strengthener, the opposite of what we want.
Answer choice (C): This answer has no effect on the argument. We already knew that it was the chemical in the juice, rather than the juice itself, that had the effect, so it's not really new information that removing the chemical (the cause) leads to elimination of the effect.
Answer choice (D): While this answer is very informative and may help us to better understand how and why the effect occurs, it does nothing to undermine the suggested practice. Your reaction to this answer should be "that's fascinating, but that's not a problem."
Answer choice (E): Pointing to the past practices of doctors who didn't know about the chemical does nothing to weaken the claim about the suggested practice. It may be that at some point doctors saw grapefruit juice as a problem, but the proposal is based on having better information now, and those past practices should not raise any doubts about the new proposal.