- Sat Jan 21, 2012 12:00 am
#64380
Complete Question Explanation
Must be true. The correct answer choice is (E)
Answer choice (A): The very first word—“all”—should be a red flag.
Nowhere in the stimulus do we have support for stating that all damaging
wavelengths are filtered out by the ozone layer. The stimulus only states
that the ozone layer filters “some” wavelengths and lets others through.
Some of those that are filtered are dangerous, as indicated by the last
sentence. Surprisingly, about 10% of all test takers select this answer
choice.
Answer choice (B): We know that many animal species could suffer severe
eye damage, and from this we can infer that some of them live in areas
threatened by holes in the ozone layer. We do not know that few of the
species live in non-threatened areas.
Answer choice (C): Nothing in the passage proves this answer choice. If
you selected this answer thinking that “many” implied “not all,” then you
made a simple, correctable mistake. As we will discuss in the chapter on
Formal Logic, “many” can include “all.”
Answer choice (D): Again, watch those modifiers! One reason the answer
choice is incorrect is because it references “most” species when the
stimulus only discusses “many” species.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer. We can follow the chain of
connections in the stimulus to prove this answer: the ozone layer filters
some wavelengths of light; holes in the ozone layer are dangerous, but
one previously overlooked danger of the holes is possible eye damage for
many species. From these two statements we can infer that the holes must
be letting some damaging wavelengths of light through. This is essentially
what answer choice (E) states.
Must be true. The correct answer choice is (E)
Answer choice (A): The very first word—“all”—should be a red flag.
Nowhere in the stimulus do we have support for stating that all damaging
wavelengths are filtered out by the ozone layer. The stimulus only states
that the ozone layer filters “some” wavelengths and lets others through.
Some of those that are filtered are dangerous, as indicated by the last
sentence. Surprisingly, about 10% of all test takers select this answer
choice.
Answer choice (B): We know that many animal species could suffer severe
eye damage, and from this we can infer that some of them live in areas
threatened by holes in the ozone layer. We do not know that few of the
species live in non-threatened areas.
Answer choice (C): Nothing in the passage proves this answer choice. If
you selected this answer thinking that “many” implied “not all,” then you
made a simple, correctable mistake. As we will discuss in the chapter on
Formal Logic, “many” can include “all.”
Answer choice (D): Again, watch those modifiers! One reason the answer
choice is incorrect is because it references “most” species when the
stimulus only discusses “many” species.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer. We can follow the chain of
connections in the stimulus to prove this answer: the ozone layer filters
some wavelengths of light; holes in the ozone layer are dangerous, but
one previously overlooked danger of the holes is possible eye damage for
many species. From these two statements we can infer that the holes must
be letting some damaging wavelengths of light through. This is essentially
what answer choice (E) states.