- Posts: 48
- Joined: Feb 19, 2021
- Tue Mar 23, 2021 10:50 am
#85774
Hi Powerscore - thanks for the explanations. For a while, it seemed to me that the rationales comparing D and E were inherently flawed in that the reasoning used to describe one answer not weakening was the same to justify the other weakening - the reason I actually eliminated both of these on my timed run through them was because they addressed relative outcomes.
Looking back, however, I believe I understand now why it makes sense. D is merely saying that the policy "would benefit" a smaller number of national park customers (and to a smaller extent) than telecom customers. This answer implies that at least one customer "would benefit", or else it would not include the phrase "would benefit." Therefore, even under the most extreme interpretation of the term, the conclusion still holds that a customer would benefit from the privatization.
E - however - makes it possible that zero customers COULD benefit from the policy. By adjusting the quantity of competition that directly causes the customers to benefit, and by doing significantly reducing it ("much less") - it is very possible that zero customers would benefit. I think that difficult part about this problem is then the natural rebuttal, which is "but that isn't likely" or thats an extreme scenario. But these most weaken questions are asking us for something that COULD weaken the argument - it doesn't need to definitively destroy it. D, even in its most extreme form, fails to weaken the idea that more than zero customers would benefit. E, alternatively, allows for the possibility that zero customers could benefit.
Let me know if this line of thinking is productive for approaching the problem.
Thanks.
Looking back, however, I believe I understand now why it makes sense. D is merely saying that the policy "would benefit" a smaller number of national park customers (and to a smaller extent) than telecom customers. This answer implies that at least one customer "would benefit", or else it would not include the phrase "would benefit." Therefore, even under the most extreme interpretation of the term, the conclusion still holds that a customer would benefit from the privatization.
E - however - makes it possible that zero customers COULD benefit from the policy. By adjusting the quantity of competition that directly causes the customers to benefit, and by doing significantly reducing it ("much less") - it is very possible that zero customers would benefit. I think that difficult part about this problem is then the natural rebuttal, which is "but that isn't likely" or thats an extreme scenario. But these most weaken questions are asking us for something that COULD weaken the argument - it doesn't need to definitively destroy it. D, even in its most extreme form, fails to weaken the idea that more than zero customers would benefit. E, alternatively, allows for the possibility that zero customers could benefit.
Let me know if this line of thinking is productive for approaching the problem.
Thanks.