- Fri Feb 14, 2020 2:40 pm
#73856
Hi One Seventy,
Could you explain what you mean by a "defender" argument? We use "defender" as a type of Assumption question, where the argument seems to be sound on it's (no clear logical holes) and so the correct assumption must come from outside the argument in the stimulus, but still affect its viability.
However, this question is a Weaken question, so we need to use a different set of tools to answer it correctly. That begins with seeing whether the stimulus contains causal reasoning: it does, as it infers a cause for why the bacteria move only to areas with the red light. So we have to use our causal weakening tools to attack the conclusion here, in order of most-to-least common:
1) An alternate cause for the effect, or;
2) Showing the same purported cause without the effect, or;
3) Showing the effect without the purported cause, or;
4) Show reverse causation (the purported cause is actually an effect of the purported effect), or;
5) An issue with the data or evidence used in the stimulus
Here the purported cause is the monitoring of the energy produced by chlorophyll, which leads to the effect of the bacteria moving to areas with more red light, where their chlorophyll is most effective at producing energy. Given that the cause isn't really supported by much evidence in the stimulus, I would Prephrase an alternate cause as the correct answer choice here, although Cause/No Effect or Effect/No Cause are also viable options.
(D) gives us a scenario where we have the same purported cause (energy produced) without the effect (bacteria moving), making it the correct answer.
Hope this clears things up!