- Wed Dec 14, 2016 12:12 pm
#31435
Complete Question Explanation
Put aside all the science and Latin in this question, and underneath you will find a fairly straightforward and simple conditional reasoning problem with some formal logic also thrown in. The second sentence alerts us to this with the key words "many" and "necessary", and that sets up this formal logic relationship:
GMI (Growth and Maturation of Insects) LA (Linolenic Acid in diet)
The next sentence gives us a standard conditional relationship, also using the word "necessary":
PV (Produce Volicitin) LA
The last sentence gives us another formal logic statement, indicated by "most":
CS (Caterpillar Species) PV
Stringing that together as best we can, we can make this chain:
CS PV LA
That can be read as "Most caterpillar species produce volicitin, and all of those that do so have linolenic acid in their diets". That's the prephrase for this Must Be True question! There's not much that can be proved based on the first claim about growth and maturation, but we might consider using it if we don't find a better answer based on this nice chain.
Answer A: We have no way of knowing, based on the stimulus, whether H. subflexa synthesizes linolenic in its bodies, or in an Easy Bake Oven, or at all. There's no support for this, so it's a loser.
Answer B: This is the correct answer. This is a perfect match for our prephrase based on the formal/conditional chain we got from the third and fourth sentences of the stimulus.
Answer C: This is a mistaken reversal of the relationship found in the third sentence. MRs cannot be proven (even though they could be true), so this answer is a loser.
Answer D: New information about poison kills this answer choice, as Must Be True questions cannot lead to answers with new info not supported by the stimulus.
Answer E: Again, new information is the death of this answer. While we know that H. subflexa eats Physalis, we cannot know that nothing else does.
Put aside all the science and Latin in this question, and underneath you will find a fairly straightforward and simple conditional reasoning problem with some formal logic also thrown in. The second sentence alerts us to this with the key words "many" and "necessary", and that sets up this formal logic relationship:
GMI (Growth and Maturation of Insects) LA (Linolenic Acid in diet)
The next sentence gives us a standard conditional relationship, also using the word "necessary":
PV (Produce Volicitin) LA
The last sentence gives us another formal logic statement, indicated by "most":
CS (Caterpillar Species) PV
Stringing that together as best we can, we can make this chain:
CS PV LA
That can be read as "Most caterpillar species produce volicitin, and all of those that do so have linolenic acid in their diets". That's the prephrase for this Must Be True question! There's not much that can be proved based on the first claim about growth and maturation, but we might consider using it if we don't find a better answer based on this nice chain.
Answer A: We have no way of knowing, based on the stimulus, whether H. subflexa synthesizes linolenic in its bodies, or in an Easy Bake Oven, or at all. There's no support for this, so it's a loser.
Answer B: This is the correct answer. This is a perfect match for our prephrase based on the formal/conditional chain we got from the third and fourth sentences of the stimulus.
Answer C: This is a mistaken reversal of the relationship found in the third sentence. MRs cannot be proven (even though they could be true), so this answer is a loser.
Answer D: New information about poison kills this answer choice, as Must Be True questions cannot lead to answers with new info not supported by the stimulus.
Answer E: Again, new information is the death of this answer. While we know that H. subflexa eats Physalis, we cannot know that nothing else does.