- Thu Aug 10, 2017 11:33 am
#38135
Hi,
I mistakenly chose answer (C) for this question. After reviewing, I understand why answer (B) is correct. The argument in the stimulus basically refutes the paleontologists' suggestion (that difficulty adapting to ice ages caused evolution of the human brain) by saying that other animals did not experience the same causal relationship. In a way, the biologist inadvertently strengthens the paleontologists' suggestion, by saying no cause / no effect, right? Regardless, the reasoning is flawed because the relationship could exist among humans without necessarily existing among animals.
But I was hoping someone might help explain why (A) and (C) are incorrect. Is it because the stimulus is causal and these answers provide flaws in conditional reasoning? Is (C) wrong because we are concerned with what is sufficient to produce the change (difficulty adapting to ice ages), not what is necessary?
Thank you.
I mistakenly chose answer (C) for this question. After reviewing, I understand why answer (B) is correct. The argument in the stimulus basically refutes the paleontologists' suggestion (that difficulty adapting to ice ages caused evolution of the human brain) by saying that other animals did not experience the same causal relationship. In a way, the biologist inadvertently strengthens the paleontologists' suggestion, by saying no cause / no effect, right? Regardless, the reasoning is flawed because the relationship could exist among humans without necessarily existing among animals.
But I was hoping someone might help explain why (A) and (C) are incorrect. Is it because the stimulus is causal and these answers provide flaws in conditional reasoning? Is (C) wrong because we are concerned with what is sufficient to produce the change (difficulty adapting to ice ages), not what is necessary?
Thank you.