- Tue Nov 16, 2021 5:58 pm
#92110
Because this is a Strengthen question, rightway1566, we only need a little bit of help from the correct answer. Anything positive that would tip the scales even a little bit in favor of our author being correct will do the job, and one thing that does that is corroborating data. Even just one study that produces similar results or additional confirming data is helpful! We aren't looking to prove anything; we just want a little help.
So rather than asking what makes C more helpful than D, let's see if D is even helpful in the first place.
For D to support the claim that younger siblings are likely to be more adventurous than their older sibs, we would need to know a few things about these business execs. First, are they even adventurous, taking risks and accepting new ideas? Is that a characteristic of all business executives? I don't know about that. Maybe if this had said "entrepreneurs" (people who start their own businesses) I might be willing to make that leap, but just plain old boring business execs? The ones I know tend to be highly risk-averse, playing it safe and rejecting a lot of new ideas in favor of doing what always worked in the past. See how this aspect of the answer could lead to discussion and debate?
Second, are the older siblings of these industry leaders less adventurous than their little brothers and sisters? This answer doesn't tell me anything about that comparison, and so it can't show me that the younger ones are MORE adventurous without me making some assumptions. The right answer - a helpful answer - shouldn't need me to help it along. It should be positive all by itself!
Finally, there's the weakness of "several" in that answer. Is it more than half? Is it just a large minority? If those "several" are just a small percentage of the total, that would mean most industry leaders are first-born, which, if we assume they are especially adventurous (and we should not assume that), would actually hurt the argument.
In short, answer D is a swamp of problems that needs us to do a lot of heavy lifting to make it come out as a net-positive for our author. Because there is so much ambiguity and weakness in that answer, it's no help at all. It's not just that the scales are tipping in favor of answer C; it's that answer D never even gets near the scale!
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
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