- Fri May 23, 2014 4:52 pm
#14812
Sometimes bringing in another study is a great way to attack an argument based on a study, if the new study tests similar things and gets different results. A good answer here might have been that another study was done that compared older children who had as infants slept with nightlights to those who had not and found no correlation between nightlights and nearsightedness. Answers A and E did bring in other studies, but not in a way that weakened the original argument - A looked at infants in the present rather than infants in the past (so the effect may not have appeared yet, if it really exists), and E looked at children older than in the first study and found "several" were nearsighted. Is that significant? How many is several? Is it enough to show the effect doesn't disappear with age? Hard to say - it might, but it might be statistically insignificant and have little to no impact on the conclusion.
In this case the best weaken is to go directly after the studies on which our author relied. By showing that THOSE studies were bad, we much more effectively and aggressively strip away all support for his conclusion. Contrary results from another, comparable study are good, when that's the best answer you have, but if you can show the studies that your guy relied on are bad all by themselves, that's even better, and we are, after all, looking for the "best" answer and not just a good one.
Thanks for asking such good questions!
In this case the best weaken is to go directly after the studies on which our author relied. By showing that THOSE studies were bad, we much more effectively and aggressively strip away all support for his conclusion. Contrary results from another, comparable study are good, when that's the best answer you have, but if you can show the studies that your guy relied on are bad all by themselves, that's even better, and we are, after all, looking for the "best" answer and not just a good one.
Thanks for asking such good questions!
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
Follow me on Twitter at https://twitter.com/LSATadam
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
Follow me on Twitter at https://twitter.com/LSATadam