Hi Ryan!
This stimulus involves a couple of conditional statements and then makes a causal conclusion. You could break it down like this:
Premise: Labrador in my neighborhood
Well-behaved
Premise:
Well-trained Well-behaved
You could take the contrapositive of that second premise and connect it to the first to get:
Labrador in my neighborhood
Well-behaved
Well-trained
Conclusion: Training, not breed, causes good behavior in labradors in my neighborhood
Essentially, the author concludes that since being well-trained is necessary for being well-behaved, that means training is the cause of good behavior.
In a Parallel question, the conclusion in the correct answer choice has to match the conclusion in the stimulus. Since we have a causal conclusion in the stimulus, we need a causal conclusion in the answer choices. Only answer choices (B) and (C) have causal conclusions.
Answer choice (B) could be broken down like this:
Premise: Snow
Car crashes
Premise: Car crashes
Careless
Combine the premises:
Snow
Car crashes
Careless
Conclusion: Carelessness, not icy roads, causes car crashes when it snows
This matches the structure of the argument in the stimulus. The author creates a chain that says that carelessness is necessary for car crashes and then concludes that carelessness causes car crashes.
Answer choice (C) can be broken down like this:
Premise: Musician I know
Good dancer
Premise: Mathematician I know
Good dancer
Combine the premises:
Musician I know
Good dancer
Mathematician I know
Conclusion: Rhythm, not ability to count, most responsible for good dancing.
This does not match the structure of the argument in the stimulus because the author does not conclude that because something is necessary for something else, that it is the cause of that something else. Also, "most" responsible is not quite as strong as saying that something is
the cause.
Let us know if there are other answer choices you need help with, but the Double the Conclusion test eliminates a lot of answer choices quickly with this question!
Hope this helps!
Best,
Kelsey