- Fri Jan 21, 2011 12:00 am
#26979
Complete Question Explanation
Strengthen—CE. The correct answer choice is (E)
Here the author presents a causal argument regarding a link between violence and nutrition, based on the results of a single experiment. Most violent offenders showed a preference for low-nutrient food, and the group that was given a high-nutrient diet instead showed a decrease in violence. The author concludes that this experiment confirms the link—this is a rather bold claim.
Answer choice (E) is the correct answer choice, as it provides more reason to believe the author’s causal argument. We know from the stimulus that those who increased their nutrients decreased their violence. From this the author concludes that the nutrition was the cause. This answer choice provides that when the posited cause (better nutrition) was absent, the effect (lower violence) was absent as well. This strengthens the causal claim from the stimulus.
Answer choice (A) is irrelevant—“some” is quite vague, and regardless, we already knew that the subjects were violent.
Answer choice (B) is also completely irrelevant: the cost and ease of implementation have nothing to do with the validity of the author’s causal argument.
Answer choice (C) is also unhelpful—“a low-nutrient food” is very vague, the stimulus already provided that most subjects tended to choose low-nutrient foods when given the choice, and the stimulus discusses high- versus low-nutrient diets, not single food items.
Answer choice (D) provides that many youths who chose a high nutrition diet were non-violent. As far as the author's causal argument goes, this doesn't have much effect—that group has not become less violent, nor switched to higher nutrition (the study in the stimulus, on the other hand, dealt with violent offenders, who switched to higher nutrition, and then became less violent). Correct answer choice E deals with a group more relevant on many counts: they were violent inmates who continued with a low nutrition diet--basically the control group in the original study, which remained violent).
Strengthen—CE. The correct answer choice is (E)
Here the author presents a causal argument regarding a link between violence and nutrition, based on the results of a single experiment. Most violent offenders showed a preference for low-nutrient food, and the group that was given a high-nutrient diet instead showed a decrease in violence. The author concludes that this experiment confirms the link—this is a rather bold claim.
- Cause Effect
better nutrition less violence
Answer choice (E) is the correct answer choice, as it provides more reason to believe the author’s causal argument. We know from the stimulus that those who increased their nutrients decreased their violence. From this the author concludes that the nutrition was the cause. This answer choice provides that when the posited cause (better nutrition) was absent, the effect (lower violence) was absent as well. This strengthens the causal claim from the stimulus.
Answer choice (A) is irrelevant—“some” is quite vague, and regardless, we already knew that the subjects were violent.
Answer choice (B) is also completely irrelevant: the cost and ease of implementation have nothing to do with the validity of the author’s causal argument.
Answer choice (C) is also unhelpful—“a low-nutrient food” is very vague, the stimulus already provided that most subjects tended to choose low-nutrient foods when given the choice, and the stimulus discusses high- versus low-nutrient diets, not single food items.
Answer choice (D) provides that many youths who chose a high nutrition diet were non-violent. As far as the author's causal argument goes, this doesn't have much effect—that group has not become less violent, nor switched to higher nutrition (the study in the stimulus, on the other hand, dealt with violent offenders, who switched to higher nutrition, and then became less violent). Correct answer choice E deals with a group more relevant on many counts: they were violent inmates who continued with a low nutrition diet--basically the control group in the original study, which remained violent).