- Fri Jan 21, 2011 12:00 am
#36821
Complete Question Explanation
Weaken—CE. The correct answer choice is (B)
The scientist’s conclusion (which happens to follow the words “I conclude”) is that there is a causal connection between the gene variant and thrill-seeking behavior. This is based on the premise that children who engage in impulsive behavior similar to adult thrill-seeking behavior tend to have the gene variant.
The scientist’s argument is flawed for many reasons. First, there is no established causal link between the dopamine response (essentially the variant) and impulsive behavior. Second, it is not shown that impulsive behavior would have the same cause as thrill-seeking behavior.
Answer choice (A): The scientist makes the leap from impulsive children to thrill-seeking adults, so, oddly enough, when in this answer impulsive adults are referenced, it is irrelevant to the argument.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice, as it weakens the argument with an attack on the data. If it is not possible to distinguish impulsive behavior from other types of behavior, then what sample are we studying? If this uncertainty is in play, then the scientist’s argument really has no basis.
Answer choice (C): There is no claim in the stimulus that the children were engaging in thrill-seeking behavior, so implying that children are misrepresented as thrill-seeking will not weaken the argument.
Answer choice (D): In the stimulus the author alludes to one possible cause of certain tendencies in children and of similar tendencies in adults. The fact that behavioral changes take place in “many” people between childhood and adulthood does not serve to weaken the argument.
Answer choice (E): It does not matter whether thrill-seeking correlates with other behaviors; this choice fails to attack the causal argument.
Weaken—CE. The correct answer choice is (B)
The scientist’s conclusion (which happens to follow the words “I conclude”) is that there is a causal connection between the gene variant and thrill-seeking behavior. This is based on the premise that children who engage in impulsive behavior similar to adult thrill-seeking behavior tend to have the gene variant.
The scientist’s argument is flawed for many reasons. First, there is no established causal link between the dopamine response (essentially the variant) and impulsive behavior. Second, it is not shown that impulsive behavior would have the same cause as thrill-seeking behavior.
Answer choice (A): The scientist makes the leap from impulsive children to thrill-seeking adults, so, oddly enough, when in this answer impulsive adults are referenced, it is irrelevant to the argument.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice, as it weakens the argument with an attack on the data. If it is not possible to distinguish impulsive behavior from other types of behavior, then what sample are we studying? If this uncertainty is in play, then the scientist’s argument really has no basis.
Answer choice (C): There is no claim in the stimulus that the children were engaging in thrill-seeking behavior, so implying that children are misrepresented as thrill-seeking will not weaken the argument.
Answer choice (D): In the stimulus the author alludes to one possible cause of certain tendencies in children and of similar tendencies in adults. The fact that behavioral changes take place in “many” people between childhood and adulthood does not serve to weaken the argument.
Answer choice (E): It does not matter whether thrill-seeking correlates with other behaviors; this choice fails to attack the causal argument.