- Tue Feb 06, 2018 8:36 pm
#43635
Good analysis, willmcchez! The issue you are having is that answer D doesn't disprove the hypothesis, because diatoms are just one type of algae, and perhaps they didn't increase but other types did. Absolutely true!
The problem is that we were not asked to disprove the hypothesis, but only to weaken it. If the hypothesis was correct, we should expect an increase in ALL types of Antarctic algae, including diatoms. The author didn't just mention them by accident - he named them as being a type of algae that the hypothesis suggests should have increased. Answer D tells us that we are missing some evidence that we would probably expect to find if diatoms had increased. That is enough to make us stroke our beards thoughtfully as we say "huh, that's odd", and we start to doubt the accuracy of the hypothesis, even if it's only a small doubt. That's enough! Doubt is the goal in weaken questions!
Since none of the other answers give us any reason to doubt the hypothesis, and answer D at least is something that makes us go "huh", it's the best of the bunch and the credited response.
Answer C gives us other stuff in the air bubbles, but the ferrous material is still there. So what if there's other stuff? Why should we believe that the other stuff, rather than the ferrous materials, are responsible? That's my response to C - "so what?" rather than "huh, that's odd" - and that's not the response we want for a weaken answer. Only by adding extra help to that answer ("hey, maybe that other stuff did it instead of the ferrous stuff?") does it start to introduce doubt, and we definitely do not want to be in the habit of helping answer choices, not when the authors are already doing such a good job of confusing and distracting us with attractive wrong answers!
Take another look at this and other weaken questions in light of the "element of doubt" approach, and see if they don't start to get a little easier and more obvious for you. Good luck!
Adam M. Tyson
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