- Wed Nov 08, 2017 7:08 pm
#41459
Hi!
Answer choice (C) addresses taking B vitamins and folic acid in the form of vitamin-mineral supplements. However, the stimulus speaks only of "including in one's diet large amounts" of these two substances. Since the stimulus is not directly indicating this increase is due to vitamin-mineral supplements, answer choice (C) is a Shell Game answer that would have no effect on the stimulus.
Answer choice (E), on the other hand, indicates that homocysteine is an effect of Alzheimer's, not the cause (which is what the author implies in the argument). Anytime an answer choice suggests that the author's causal argument might be reversed, that will weaken that causal argument.
So, it isn't so much that answer choice (E) is better than answer choice (C). Answer choice (C) really does not have any impact on the argument, while (E) is the only answer that does weaken the argument.
Hope that helps!
Eric Ockert
PowerScore LSAT/GMAT/SAT Instructor