- Sat Feb 04, 2017 12:38 pm
#32461
Complete Question Explanation
Weaken—CE. The correct answer choice is (A)
The author of this stimulus leads off with the conclusion, that “animal feed should not include genetically modified plants.” To support this conclusion, the author points to a study in which researchers fed one group of laboratory rats genetically modified potatoes for thirty days, while another set of rats were fed a “normal diet of foods that were not genetically modified.” The rats fed genetically modified potatoes tended to develop “intestinal deformities and a weakened immune system,” while the rats fed a normal diet did not.
As is often the case on the LSAT, there appear to be some issues with this study. Most glaringly, we do not know why potatoes were chosen as the genetically modified food, nor whether the rats were fed only potatoes, as opposed to a “normal diet of foods.” If the researchers both changed the rats’ normal diet and added genetically modified food, having both of those changes made simultaneously would cloud the issue of causation. Put another way, did the rats develop medical issues because they ate genetically modified food, or did those issues result from their thirty day diet of potatoes, regardless of the genetic modifications?
A separate issue is the generalization of the results from a study of rats to a conclusion about animal feed generally. Even if we assume that the rats’ medical issues resulted from their consumption of genetically modified potatoes, that evidence does not establish that other animals would be affected the same way the rats were affected.
The question stem indicates that this is a Weaken question. We can prephrase that the way the study was conducted, in which the researchers apparently both changed the rats’ diet and exposed the rats to genetically modified foods, makes the causation ambiguous, so that it may not be the case that genetically modified plants should be kept out of the rats’ feed, let alone animal feed.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice, because it introduces as fact our suspicion that the researchers not only introduced genetically modified food, but changed the rats’ normal diet as well. As discussed above, this information weakens the causal conclusion by raising the change from the rats’ normal diet, independent of the introduction of modified food, as an alternate cause for the negative change in the rats’ health.
Answer choice (B): Nothing in the stimulus suggests that when within the thirty day period the rats ate the majority of the modified potatoes has any impact on the causal relationship between the genetic modifications and the damage to the rats.
Answer choice (C): This answer choice has no connection to genetically modified food, and is irrelevant to the conclusion.
Answer choice (D): It is not clear what nutritional value potatoes have for rats. This answer choice may simply be saying that potatoes have zero nutritional value to rats with or without genetic modification. In any event, this comparison does not impact the implied causal relationship between genetic modification and the medical problems experienced by the rats.
Answer choice (E): This is a very tempting answer choice, because it explicitly mentions causality in a way that is negative for the researchers. Some taking the test thought that the inability of the researchers to explain how the genetic modifications would have caused the rats’ medical problems weakens the causal conclusion. However, the inability to explain a causal mechanism does not show there is not causality present.
Weaken—CE. The correct answer choice is (A)
The author of this stimulus leads off with the conclusion, that “animal feed should not include genetically modified plants.” To support this conclusion, the author points to a study in which researchers fed one group of laboratory rats genetically modified potatoes for thirty days, while another set of rats were fed a “normal diet of foods that were not genetically modified.” The rats fed genetically modified potatoes tended to develop “intestinal deformities and a weakened immune system,” while the rats fed a normal diet did not.
As is often the case on the LSAT, there appear to be some issues with this study. Most glaringly, we do not know why potatoes were chosen as the genetically modified food, nor whether the rats were fed only potatoes, as opposed to a “normal diet of foods.” If the researchers both changed the rats’ normal diet and added genetically modified food, having both of those changes made simultaneously would cloud the issue of causation. Put another way, did the rats develop medical issues because they ate genetically modified food, or did those issues result from their thirty day diet of potatoes, regardless of the genetic modifications?
A separate issue is the generalization of the results from a study of rats to a conclusion about animal feed generally. Even if we assume that the rats’ medical issues resulted from their consumption of genetically modified potatoes, that evidence does not establish that other animals would be affected the same way the rats were affected.
The question stem indicates that this is a Weaken question. We can prephrase that the way the study was conducted, in which the researchers apparently both changed the rats’ diet and exposed the rats to genetically modified foods, makes the causation ambiguous, so that it may not be the case that genetically modified plants should be kept out of the rats’ feed, let alone animal feed.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice, because it introduces as fact our suspicion that the researchers not only introduced genetically modified food, but changed the rats’ normal diet as well. As discussed above, this information weakens the causal conclusion by raising the change from the rats’ normal diet, independent of the introduction of modified food, as an alternate cause for the negative change in the rats’ health.
Answer choice (B): Nothing in the stimulus suggests that when within the thirty day period the rats ate the majority of the modified potatoes has any impact on the causal relationship between the genetic modifications and the damage to the rats.
Answer choice (C): This answer choice has no connection to genetically modified food, and is irrelevant to the conclusion.
Answer choice (D): It is not clear what nutritional value potatoes have for rats. This answer choice may simply be saying that potatoes have zero nutritional value to rats with or without genetic modification. In any event, this comparison does not impact the implied causal relationship between genetic modification and the medical problems experienced by the rats.
Answer choice (E): This is a very tempting answer choice, because it explicitly mentions causality in a way that is negative for the researchers. Some taking the test thought that the inability of the researchers to explain how the genetic modifications would have caused the rats’ medical problems weakens the causal conclusion. However, the inability to explain a causal mechanism does not show there is not causality present.