- Fri Jul 06, 2018 3:38 pm
#47582
Hi, Alexis!
This question is tricky because the conclusion does something kinda funny: it takes away part of the cause-effect gap between the premises and the conclusion and restricts the conclusion to a narrower question of causality.
Allow me to explain. The big question you might be asking yourself after reading this stimulus is, "Did Mount Etna cause the temperature drops at all? Maybe there was some other cause."
The conclusion acknowledges this possibility by starting off, "If these phenomena [the temperature drops] were caused by volcanic ash, then..."
In other words, when we are considering the validity of this conclusion, we are taking it for granted, for the purpose of the argument, that the temperature drops were caused by volcanic ash. Now we have a narrower question to deal with: we have to determine whether the volcanic ash causing the temperature drops came from Mount Etna. Even if we grant that the temperature drops come from volcanic ash, at the moment we do not know whether the volcanic ash causing the temperature drops came from Mount Etna.
This is where answer choice D came it. It brought up the possibility that another eruption closer to China occurred. If such an eruption had occurred, then it would be less likely that Etna's volcanic ash needed to travel all the way around the world. If no such eruption occurred, then it would be more likely that Etna's volcanic ash was responsible for the temperature drops.
The problem with answer choice C is that it disregards the fact that for the purposes of the conclusion, we are already granting that volcanic ash caused colder temperatures in China. Regardless of the temperatures in Sicily, we will not know whether the volcanic ash causing the colder temperatures in China came from Mount Etna or not.
Good question. Does this make sense?