- Thu May 28, 2020 11:22 am
#75756
Hi Cbg!
The only thing Answer Choice (E) tells us is that certain genetic diseases are, well, genetic—they appear in members of the same family because they're passed on through genes.
The author tells us that proponents of DNA fingerprinting assume that different characteristics are independent of one another. This means that individual DNA characteristics don't influence one another. If traits are independent, the more traits you consider, the less likely you are to find a complete "match." For example, it might not be so hard to find a person who matches one trait (like finding two people with blue eyes), but it becomes progressively harder to find someone with multiple matching traits (like blue eyes, red hair, tall, etc.). Having a certain genetic disease might be quite rare, and (E) doesn't give us any indication that genetic diseases increase the dependence between certain traits.
Answer Choice (C), on the other hand, directly challenges the assumption that the proponents make. If there are "various subgroups" in the population that share certain sets of genetic characteristics, that means that traits are dependent on one another. For example, if having blue eyes makes it more likely that you also have red hair, then matching this additional characteristic doesn't actually increase the odds of finding the right person.