- Mon May 02, 2016 1:27 pm
#23757
Complete Question Explanation
Weaken. The correct answer choice is (D)
The stimulus makes a series of assertions without associating any of them, so if you could not find a main conclusion, there is a reason for it-- the stimulus has no stated main conclusion.
There are two general assertions in the stimulus:
1. Since orthodox medicine is largely ineffective against minor ailments and is ineffective against many serious, life-threatening illnesses, orthodox medicine is ineffective at the extremes.
2. People turn to alternative medicine when orthodox medicine does not help or when its side effects are unacceptable, but alternative medicine does nothing at all.
From those general assertions, you can presume that the stimulus is geared toward the unstated conclusion that there are illnesses for which no treatment is effective, which actually is answers another question about this stimulus (on the test there were two questions accompanying it).
However, you are asked to weaken the charge against alternative medicine. Notice that this question is much different from the usual weaken question. Typically you weaken an argument, which means that you do not attack the initial stated premises, you merely attack whether the conclusion follows. In this case, you actually must attack the charge, or “premise,” since you are asked to. You should basically look to contradict the idea that alternative medicine has no effects.
You need to remain flexible on test day, because you will be asked a few questions that do not match nicely to the usual. Remember, those questions tend to be very easy, and are just to find out whether you follow instructions.
Answer choice (A): Since this choice does not make it clear that alternative medicine caused the predictions of orthodox medicine to fail, you cannot conclude that the “miracle” effect in this choice was due to alternative medicine, so this choice is wrong.
Answer choice (B): Simply explaining that alternative and orthodox medicine are based on different concepts does not show that alternative medicine has any effects, so this choice is wrong.
Answer choice (C): Even though “hope” is an effect, this choice does not make it clear that a medical effect occurs, and it should be fairly clear that the stimulus concerns whether or not treatments change the actual disease condition, not whether people feel better about illness.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice, and explains how “hope” can have a medicinal effect. If a person’s belief causes the person to fight a disease more effectively, alternative medicine ultimately has the kind of effect the stimulus concerned, so the charge made in the stimulus is wrong.
Answer choice (E): Whether or not treatments used in orthodox medicine at times prove totally ineffective has nothing to do with showing that alternative medicine can have an effect, so this choice is wrong. The charge was that alternative medicine has no effects. Even though you might conclude on that basis that orthodox medicine is better, you were asked to attack the charge, not something that you might conclude on the basis of the charge.
Weaken. The correct answer choice is (D)
The stimulus makes a series of assertions without associating any of them, so if you could not find a main conclusion, there is a reason for it-- the stimulus has no stated main conclusion.
There are two general assertions in the stimulus:
1. Since orthodox medicine is largely ineffective against minor ailments and is ineffective against many serious, life-threatening illnesses, orthodox medicine is ineffective at the extremes.
2. People turn to alternative medicine when orthodox medicine does not help or when its side effects are unacceptable, but alternative medicine does nothing at all.
From those general assertions, you can presume that the stimulus is geared toward the unstated conclusion that there are illnesses for which no treatment is effective, which actually is answers another question about this stimulus (on the test there were two questions accompanying it).
However, you are asked to weaken the charge against alternative medicine. Notice that this question is much different from the usual weaken question. Typically you weaken an argument, which means that you do not attack the initial stated premises, you merely attack whether the conclusion follows. In this case, you actually must attack the charge, or “premise,” since you are asked to. You should basically look to contradict the idea that alternative medicine has no effects.
You need to remain flexible on test day, because you will be asked a few questions that do not match nicely to the usual. Remember, those questions tend to be very easy, and are just to find out whether you follow instructions.
Answer choice (A): Since this choice does not make it clear that alternative medicine caused the predictions of orthodox medicine to fail, you cannot conclude that the “miracle” effect in this choice was due to alternative medicine, so this choice is wrong.
Answer choice (B): Simply explaining that alternative and orthodox medicine are based on different concepts does not show that alternative medicine has any effects, so this choice is wrong.
Answer choice (C): Even though “hope” is an effect, this choice does not make it clear that a medical effect occurs, and it should be fairly clear that the stimulus concerns whether or not treatments change the actual disease condition, not whether people feel better about illness.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice, and explains how “hope” can have a medicinal effect. If a person’s belief causes the person to fight a disease more effectively, alternative medicine ultimately has the kind of effect the stimulus concerned, so the charge made in the stimulus is wrong.
Answer choice (E): Whether or not treatments used in orthodox medicine at times prove totally ineffective has nothing to do with showing that alternative medicine can have an effect, so this choice is wrong. The charge was that alternative medicine has no effects. Even though you might conclude on that basis that orthodox medicine is better, you were asked to attack the charge, not something that you might conclude on the basis of the charge.