- Wed Apr 06, 2016 2:55 pm
#22808
Complete Question Explanation
Weaken. The correct answer choice is (D)
The author of this stimulus draws a very questionable conclusion which may at first seem reasonable:
Premise: More of those who got sick took anti-seasickness medication.
Conclusion: People would be better off not taking anti-seasickness medication.
The problem, we may notice, is that this is not a random sample of the population. Is there some other possible explanation for those who got sick to more likely have taken the medication? Since those who are more likely to get sick are the ones most likely to take medication, the survey results may not reflect what the author suggests. The correct answer choice to this weaken question will be the one which suggests that the anti-seasickness medication may not be detrimental as the author suggests.
Answer choice (A): This answer choice doesn't even mention the medication, so it cannot weaken the argument from the stimulus.
Answer choice (B): This answer choice does not weaken the author's argument, nor does it give reason to doubt the survey results. If the results were tainted by the drug company, they probably would not have been skewed to show the drug ineffective anyway.
Answer choice (C): This answer choice may seem at first glance to lend some credibility to the survey, but the central question here is whether the high proportion of medicators, among those who got sick, proves that people would be better off without the medication.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice, and is aligned with the prephrase from the discussion above—not only is the medication shown to be non-detrimental, it may even be beneficial! If the medication reduced the symptoms, this clearly weakens the argument that people would be better off without it.
Answer choice (E): This answer choice does not weaken the author's argument, and may strengthen it: if there are even more who got sick than reported by the survey, this would suggest even more strongly that the people who took the medication would have been better off without it.
Weaken. The correct answer choice is (D)
The author of this stimulus draws a very questionable conclusion which may at first seem reasonable:
Premise: More of those who got sick took anti-seasickness medication.
Conclusion: People would be better off not taking anti-seasickness medication.
The problem, we may notice, is that this is not a random sample of the population. Is there some other possible explanation for those who got sick to more likely have taken the medication? Since those who are more likely to get sick are the ones most likely to take medication, the survey results may not reflect what the author suggests. The correct answer choice to this weaken question will be the one which suggests that the anti-seasickness medication may not be detrimental as the author suggests.
Answer choice (A): This answer choice doesn't even mention the medication, so it cannot weaken the argument from the stimulus.
Answer choice (B): This answer choice does not weaken the author's argument, nor does it give reason to doubt the survey results. If the results were tainted by the drug company, they probably would not have been skewed to show the drug ineffective anyway.
Answer choice (C): This answer choice may seem at first glance to lend some credibility to the survey, but the central question here is whether the high proportion of medicators, among those who got sick, proves that people would be better off without the medication.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice, and is aligned with the prephrase from the discussion above—not only is the medication shown to be non-detrimental, it may even be beneficial! If the medication reduced the symptoms, this clearly weakens the argument that people would be better off without it.
Answer choice (E): This answer choice does not weaken the author's argument, and may strengthen it: if there are even more who got sick than reported by the survey, this would suggest even more strongly that the people who took the medication would have been better off without it.