- Mon Feb 12, 2018 5:20 pm
#43868
Hi mepst,
The issue with the stimulus in this question is that there is not enough evidence to show the causation that the conclusion states. What it shows is that when the effect (herniated disk) is present, so is the supposed cause (defective gene), albeit only at a 5% rate, so it couldn't possibly be the sole cause. We are also shown that when the effect is not present, the cause is not present either. What we really need to know, though, is how often the effect occurs when we have the cause.
Both answer choices (B) and (C) deal with this rate, but at opposite ends of the evidentiary strength spectrum. (B) puts the chance the cause has to actually show the effect at a mere 2% rate, making it a great answer to a Weaken question. However, as a Strengthen question, we want to show that the effect appears at as close to 1:1 with the cause as possible. (C) gives us that 1:1 cause-effect ratio, as everyone with the defective gene (cause) has a herniated disk (effect) in the study, effectively proving the conclusion correct.
Hope this helps!