- Tue Apr 12, 2016 3:43 pm
#22975
Complete Question Explanation
Assumption-X. The correct answer choice is (D)
The stimulus introduces a problematic situation and offers a solution. The situation is that fire ants from Brazil now infest portions of the US and are extremely destructive to native insects.
The argument is that since certain predator-insects in Brazil limit the fire-ant population there, importing those predator-insects to the United States would be a good way of controlling the fire-ant population in the US, and of overall benefit to the environment.
The argument makes several assumptions. First, it assumes an analogy between the situation in Brazil and that in the US. Will the predator-insects be able to control the fire ants in the US, or will the altered environment limit the predators' abilities? The argument forgets to discuss that. Also, the argument does not consider that the predator-insects might actually make the problem in the US even worse. If those insects are aggressive enough to control the fire ants, what impact will those predator-insects have on the native insects that are, so far, managing to survive? It is not at all clear that importing the predator-insects is a good idea.
Basically, the argument assumes an analogy between the US and Brazil, which is vulnerable to the introduction of more evidence, so it is likely that assumptions will defend the argument from harmful potential evidence.
This is an EXCEPT question, so you will eliminate the assumptions.
Answer choice (A): This choice defends the argument from the possibility that the predator-insects are even worse than the fire ants, so this is an assumption the argument makes, and this response is incorrect.
Answer choice (B): If the predator insects are not able to survive in the US, bringing them to the US wouldn't hurt anything, but it would be a complete waste. This is a consideration the argument needs defense against, so this response is an assumption, and this choice is wrong.
Answer choice (C): This choice defends the argument from the possibility that the especially aggressive fire ants in the US might actually be vicious enough to destroy the predator-insects. If the predator-insects are destroyed by these nasty fire ants, they won't help solve any problems, so this choice is an assumption and is wrong.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. At first glance, that might seem confusing, since it makes it more likely that the predator insects would stop the expansion of the fire ant populations. However, it doesn't show that the predators won't be more harmful than the fire ants, and the assumption negation technique can show that this response is not essential. The conclusion was that the environment would experience overall benefit, and that the increase in the population of fire ants would be stopped. If the predator insects don't stop the increase before the ants spread, there could still be a benefit to the environment, and the increase could still be stopped at some point, so this choice fails the negation test, is not necessary to the argument, and is a correct response to an except question.
Answer choice (E): If the fire ants reproduce more quickly than the predator-insects can eat them, the predators might not be able to control the fire ant population. Since this choice defends against that possibility, it is an assumption, and this response is incorrect.
Assumption-X. The correct answer choice is (D)
The stimulus introduces a problematic situation and offers a solution. The situation is that fire ants from Brazil now infest portions of the US and are extremely destructive to native insects.
The argument is that since certain predator-insects in Brazil limit the fire-ant population there, importing those predator-insects to the United States would be a good way of controlling the fire-ant population in the US, and of overall benefit to the environment.
The argument makes several assumptions. First, it assumes an analogy between the situation in Brazil and that in the US. Will the predator-insects be able to control the fire ants in the US, or will the altered environment limit the predators' abilities? The argument forgets to discuss that. Also, the argument does not consider that the predator-insects might actually make the problem in the US even worse. If those insects are aggressive enough to control the fire ants, what impact will those predator-insects have on the native insects that are, so far, managing to survive? It is not at all clear that importing the predator-insects is a good idea.
Basically, the argument assumes an analogy between the US and Brazil, which is vulnerable to the introduction of more evidence, so it is likely that assumptions will defend the argument from harmful potential evidence.
This is an EXCEPT question, so you will eliminate the assumptions.
Answer choice (A): This choice defends the argument from the possibility that the predator-insects are even worse than the fire ants, so this is an assumption the argument makes, and this response is incorrect.
Answer choice (B): If the predator insects are not able to survive in the US, bringing them to the US wouldn't hurt anything, but it would be a complete waste. This is a consideration the argument needs defense against, so this response is an assumption, and this choice is wrong.
Answer choice (C): This choice defends the argument from the possibility that the especially aggressive fire ants in the US might actually be vicious enough to destroy the predator-insects. If the predator-insects are destroyed by these nasty fire ants, they won't help solve any problems, so this choice is an assumption and is wrong.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. At first glance, that might seem confusing, since it makes it more likely that the predator insects would stop the expansion of the fire ant populations. However, it doesn't show that the predators won't be more harmful than the fire ants, and the assumption negation technique can show that this response is not essential. The conclusion was that the environment would experience overall benefit, and that the increase in the population of fire ants would be stopped. If the predator insects don't stop the increase before the ants spread, there could still be a benefit to the environment, and the increase could still be stopped at some point, so this choice fails the negation test, is not necessary to the argument, and is a correct response to an except question.
Answer choice (E): If the fire ants reproduce more quickly than the predator-insects can eat them, the predators might not be able to control the fire ant population. Since this choice defends against that possibility, it is an assumption, and this response is incorrect.