- Tue Feb 19, 2019 5:25 pm
#62775
I'll take you back to my football game analogy earlier in this thread, akanshalsat - so what if most of the people attracted to the game were Rams fans? Does that tell us anything about whether the game attracted a lot of the local Panther fans? Not at all! Maybe 99% of the fans attracted to the game were Rams fans, but the remaining 1% of the fans represented 100% of all Panthers fans in the region? Here's some numbers:
Total fans at the game: 40,000
Rams fans at the game: 39,600
Total Panthers founds found in all of Southern California: 400
Panthers fans at the game: 400
They got us all! Very effective!
Similarly, even if 99% of the insects attracted to the device were NOT mosquitoes, if the remaining 1% represented all of the mosquitoes in the area, then it still could "significantly aid in controlling the potentially dangerous mosquito population." The percentage of insects attracted to the device that were not mosquitoes is irrelevant, because the only thing we care about is the percentage of mosquitoes in the are that were attracted and killed.
As to not getting all the mosquitoes, including those that are beyond the immediate vicinity (whatever range that is), that's not a big deal because we are not looking to prove that one single device could do the job all by itself. That is way too high a standard for a simple weaken question! Rather, we are looking to just weaken the claim that the device isn't going to be helpful. If we have any evidence that it may actually be helpful in dealing with mosquitoes, that's enough to weaken the argument, and A gives us some evidence along those lines. We got some mosquitoes, and now we can't find any nearby - maybe we got them all? Winner!
Adam M. Tyson
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