- Fri Aug 19, 2016 10:56 am
#27913
Complete Question Explanation
Flaw in the Reasoning. The correct answer choice is (D)
The author begins this stimulus by pointing out that the number of synthetic carcinogenic chemical compounds, used as pesticides, preservatives, or food additives, is small in comparison to the number of non-synthetic carcinogenic compounds found in plants and animals. Based on this premise the author concludes that one cannot point to synthetic carcinogens as the cause of the increased cancer rates of the last few decades.
Since we are searching for a weakness in the argument, we should consider that a numbers comparison like the one offered might not be applicable to this inquiry—that is, even if there are many non-synthetic carcinogens in existence, we cannot draw conclusions about their practical effects on cancer rates without knowing how much cancer they cause. Instead of considering whether there are more natural or synthetic carcinogens, we should consider which type offers the greatest practical threat (which type leads to the greatest actual number of cancer cases, for example).
Answer choice (A): Pollutants are not the same as carcinogens. Furthermore, by offering an alternative cause this answer choice would actually strengthen the conclusion that the increased cancer rates are not attributable to synthetic carcinogens.
Answer choice (B): This does not weaken the conclusion regarding non-synthetic carcinogens and would, like answer choice (A), actually strengthen that conclusion.
Answer choice (C): Toxic is not synonymous with carcinogenic, so this answer choice would not weaken the argument in the stimulus in any way.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. While there is a large number of non-synthetic carcinogens, exposure to these compounds is limited. On the other hand, there is increased exposure to synthetic carcinogens that is coincident to the increased cancer rate. As stated in the prephrased answer, it is the exposure to the carcinogens, not their numbers, which is responsible for the increased cancer rate.
Answer choice (E): Varied susceptibility is not overlooked; it is simply irrelevant to the argument in the stimulus, which concerns the possible causes of cancer rates that we know to have increased in recent decades.
Flaw in the Reasoning. The correct answer choice is (D)
The author begins this stimulus by pointing out that the number of synthetic carcinogenic chemical compounds, used as pesticides, preservatives, or food additives, is small in comparison to the number of non-synthetic carcinogenic compounds found in plants and animals. Based on this premise the author concludes that one cannot point to synthetic carcinogens as the cause of the increased cancer rates of the last few decades.
Since we are searching for a weakness in the argument, we should consider that a numbers comparison like the one offered might not be applicable to this inquiry—that is, even if there are many non-synthetic carcinogens in existence, we cannot draw conclusions about their practical effects on cancer rates without knowing how much cancer they cause. Instead of considering whether there are more natural or synthetic carcinogens, we should consider which type offers the greatest practical threat (which type leads to the greatest actual number of cancer cases, for example).
Answer choice (A): Pollutants are not the same as carcinogens. Furthermore, by offering an alternative cause this answer choice would actually strengthen the conclusion that the increased cancer rates are not attributable to synthetic carcinogens.
Answer choice (B): This does not weaken the conclusion regarding non-synthetic carcinogens and would, like answer choice (A), actually strengthen that conclusion.
Answer choice (C): Toxic is not synonymous with carcinogenic, so this answer choice would not weaken the argument in the stimulus in any way.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. While there is a large number of non-synthetic carcinogens, exposure to these compounds is limited. On the other hand, there is increased exposure to synthetic carcinogens that is coincident to the increased cancer rate. As stated in the prephrased answer, it is the exposure to the carcinogens, not their numbers, which is responsible for the increased cancer rate.
Answer choice (E): Varied susceptibility is not overlooked; it is simply irrelevant to the argument in the stimulus, which concerns the possible causes of cancer rates that we know to have increased in recent decades.