- Sun Feb 22, 2015 12:00 am
#34924
Complete Question Explanation
Method of Reasoning. The correct answer choice is (D)
This scientist discusses the hypothesis that humans’ natural tendency to colonize will eventually lead
to galaxy-wide colonization by trillions of humans. That number of humans is so great that were
this to happen, the vast majority of humans ever to exist would live during this period. Since we are
representative humans, it would be exceedingly likely that we would be alive during such a period,
but we are not. The author concludes that galaxy-wide colonization is thus unlikely to occur.
Premise: Trillions of humans would comprise the vast majority of humans to ever exist.
Premise: As humans, we have no reason to think we are unrepresentative.
Subsidiary conclusion: Thus it is extremely likely that we would be alive during this period
as well.
Premise: We are not alive during that period.
Main Conclusion: It is unlikely that such colonization will ever take place.
The stimulus is followed by a Method of Reasoning question, so the correct answer choice will
describe the scientists’ reasoning process.
Answer choice (A): The scientist’s conclusion is not based on the fact that trillions of humans have
never existed before, so this choice’s description of the author’s reasoning is inaccurate, and this
choice should be ruled out of contention.
Answer choice (B): This answer choice describes an argument that is self-contradictory. Since there
is no implied contradiction to any premise that the author has accepted, this cannot be the correct
answer choice.
Answer choice (C): The author actually makes a prediction about the future based on present facts,
so this choice cannot provide an accurate depiction of the scientist’s reasoning.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. The scientist says that the existence of
trillions of humans would make it very likely that we as humans would be alive during that period.
Since that is not the case (that event has not occurred), the author believes that the hypothesis is
probably false.
Answer choice (E): The theory that the scientist refutes is based on the human tendency to explore
and colonize. The scientist’s argument is based not on established human tendencies but on statistics.
Method of Reasoning. The correct answer choice is (D)
This scientist discusses the hypothesis that humans’ natural tendency to colonize will eventually lead
to galaxy-wide colonization by trillions of humans. That number of humans is so great that were
this to happen, the vast majority of humans ever to exist would live during this period. Since we are
representative humans, it would be exceedingly likely that we would be alive during such a period,
but we are not. The author concludes that galaxy-wide colonization is thus unlikely to occur.
Premise: Trillions of humans would comprise the vast majority of humans to ever exist.
Premise: As humans, we have no reason to think we are unrepresentative.
Subsidiary conclusion: Thus it is extremely likely that we would be alive during this period
as well.
Premise: We are not alive during that period.
Main Conclusion: It is unlikely that such colonization will ever take place.
The stimulus is followed by a Method of Reasoning question, so the correct answer choice will
describe the scientists’ reasoning process.
Answer choice (A): The scientist’s conclusion is not based on the fact that trillions of humans have
never existed before, so this choice’s description of the author’s reasoning is inaccurate, and this
choice should be ruled out of contention.
Answer choice (B): This answer choice describes an argument that is self-contradictory. Since there
is no implied contradiction to any premise that the author has accepted, this cannot be the correct
answer choice.
Answer choice (C): The author actually makes a prediction about the future based on present facts,
so this choice cannot provide an accurate depiction of the scientist’s reasoning.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. The scientist says that the existence of
trillions of humans would make it very likely that we as humans would be alive during that period.
Since that is not the case (that event has not occurred), the author believes that the hypothesis is
probably false.
Answer choice (E): The theory that the scientist refutes is based on the human tendency to explore
and colonize. The scientist’s argument is based not on established human tendencies but on statistics.