jw190 wrote:Hello everyone,
Although I picked C originally, I've been stuck reviewing this question for some time now and just cannot figure out specifically why (E) is wrong.
The author is proposing a temporary fix to Earth's carbon issue; she wants to pump it into the deep ocean where it'll stay for hundreds of years. The assumption comes from her intermediate conclusion: that the C02 will stay stuck with the cool, deep water and will not quickly return to the surface.
(E) turns the problem into a conditional (which seems dubious), but one that seems to address this issue. "If C02 should be pumped into the deep ocean [which the author claims it should], then C02 must be trapped down there for 100s of years." Alternatively, "If C02 would not be trapped for 100s of years, C02 should not be pumped into the deep ocean." This choice seems to address that same assumption.
Also, negating (E) doesn't seem to help clear things up for me either. Negating the contrapositive, "If C02 would not be trapped for 100s of years, C02 should be pumped into the deep ocean." This still seems to hurt the argument!
Does anyone see what I'm not? Thanks for any advice!
My apologies for the double post. I've done some thinking on this one over the past couple days and wanted to add in my additional thoughts on why (E) is incorrect.
We're looking for the required assumption; the assumption that doesn't necessarily make her argument true, but at least makes it possible. This assumption is that the C02 won't escape quickly back into the atmosphere as, if it did, her recommendation wouldn't really help reduce Earth's C02 at all. (C) gets at this assumption perfectly.
With (E), I considered the contrapositive: "If C02 would NOT be trapped for 100s of years, C02 should NOT be pumped into the deep ocean." Does this conditional statement get at that same assumption? Not really. Although she is assuming the C02 won't quickly return to the surface, even if it did, would that be sufficient for her to abandon her recommendation? Maybe, maybe not. But either way it doesn't seem to be the assumption that's absolutely
required.
How is my analysis of choice (E)? What am I missing and what can I improve? Thanks for reading!