rbolin wrote:I am having trouble being able to see the difference between StrengthenX and Cannot Be True. Can someone explain the difference?
Hi rbolin,
Thanks for your question. Those two question types come from two different families, which means that you should approach the two types very differently.
Strengthen X questions provide that all of the answer choices,
if true, will strengthen the author's argument, except for one. The correct answer choice will be the only one that doesn't make the author's argument stronger.
So, in StrengthenX questions, you have to take each answer choice as true and assess each one's effect on the author's argument. Again, the one that doesn't strengthen will be the correct answer choice. In this sense, the one that
doesn't add anything will be correct.
In Cannot Be True questions, on the other hand, the vital information resides in the stimulus. In response to these questions, the correct answer choice will be the only one that is inconsistent with the facts provided by the author. Thus, the correct answer will be one that
directly contradicts information in the stimulus.
If you are thinking that the answer to a StrengthenX question must weaken the argument, that also isn't true (it can have no effect). But, for a moment, let's say that the answer does weaken the argument. Does that then make the two questions the same? No, but I can understand why they would feel that way. The difference is the matter of direction: a Weaken answer
attacks the stimulus, whereas a Cannot answer is
weakened by the stimulus.
I hope that's helpful! Let me know--thanks!
~Steve