James Finch wrote:Hi LSAT Cheetah,
So the key to this Strengthen question is realizing the big gap between the evidence provided and the conclusion, that all harbor seals start with an aversion to the killer whales but learn to ignore the ones that eat only fish. That means we need another premise that shows that the seals learn to not be afraid of the fish-eating ones: the causal relationship is that being familiar with fish-eating killer whale chatter causes the effect that the harbor seals are not afraid.
There are multiple ways to help bolster that causal relationship: eliminate another potential alternate cause, show both the cause and effect in another context, show that without the cause, there isn't the effect, or without the effect we don't see the cause.
(C) is an example of showing a situation where the cause is absent (familiarity with fish-eating killer whale chatter) and so is the effect (being unafraid, ie they are afraid). So (C) works by showing that without the cause, we don't see the effect either.
(E) posits a parallel situation where an individual harbor seal learns to be afraid of a fish-eating killer whale because of a mistaken attack, while other harbor seals remain unafraid. However, this isn't the causal relationship we're looking for; we need to show the seals overcoming their fear after learning the fish-eaters' chatter, not becoming afraid after being mistakenly attacked. Remember, the conclusion in the stimulus is trying to show that the seals all begin afraid and gradually lose that fear as they learn which killer whales are dangerous and which aren't. (E) reverses this relationship, making it incorrect.
Hope this clears things up!
Hi James,
Your breakdown really helps me realize the causal relationship that I didn't notice before. I'd like to confirm my understanding through your explanation.
CAUSE: Harbor seals FAMILIARITY with killer whale dialects
EFFECT: Harbor seals AVOID seal-eating killer whales
Answer C features No cause, no effect because
CAUSE: NOT familiar with (fish-eating killer whale dialect)
EFFECT: Harbor seal did NOT avoid a SEAL-EATING KILLER WHALE (instead, the mature seal avoided a FISH-EATING killer whale).
In other words, it provides support to the hypothesis that even mature harbor seals LEARN unfamiliar killer whale dialects until they realize they are not seal-eating killer whales.