- Tue Sep 21, 2021 4:04 pm
#90632
Complete Question Explanation
Strengthen. The correct answer choice is (E).
The argument relies on a comparison between the teeth of European children and children in the United States: European children have relatively healthier teeth (in terms of decayed, missing, and filled teeth) than U.S. children.
It concludes that fluoride in water (which the U.S. has and Europe does not) does not have a substantial tendency to prevent tooth decay.
The argument misses that there could be all kinds of other differences between European and U.S. children's dental health that could contribute to these data. Maybe European children eat foods more conducive to dental health. Or maybe European children have better access to dental care. Or maybe European children are better about following personal dental care regimes like brushing their teeth and flossing. If any of these things were true, THAT could be the reason European children are doing better than U.S. children. And, importantly, in those circumstances, it could still be true that fluoride in water has a substantial tendency to prevent tooth decay, just not enough to overcome those other things that U.S. children are doing worse at (having bad diets, or not having access to dentists, or not following personal tooth care regimens like brushing/flossing).
To strengthen the argument we need to look for an answer choice that gets rid of one of these possibilities, thus making the comparison between European and U.S. children a better comparison. In other words, we need to find an answer choice that says one of these alternative factors is NOT all that different between European and U.S. children.
Answer choice (A): The availability of toothpaste with fluoride in the U.S. and Europe tells us nothing about whether children in Europe and the U.S. are actually using the toothpaste, and without that information, we cannot determine answer choice A's impact on the argument. Thus it is irrelevant as stated, and incorrect.
Answer choice (B): Answer choice B is talking about a different form of fluoride use than that in the conclusion (which is specifically about fluoride in water). More importantly, answer choice B says nothing about dental practice in Europe, so it cannot shed any light on the argument's comparison between European and U.S. children. Thus it is irrelevant and incorrect.
Answer choice (C): Like answer choice A, answer choice C as stated doesn't give us enough information to understand the impact on dental health of European and U.S. children. How is the hygiene taught in both Europe and the U.S. (similarly or differently)? How well do children apply the lessons they're taught in both Europe and the U.S. (well or poorly, similarly or differently)? Without knowing more, answer choice C does not shed light on whether the comparison in the stimulus is good or bad. Thus it is irrelevant as stated, and incorrect.
Answer choice (D): Answer choice D weakens the argument. It raises one of the possibilities the argument forgot about, a potential difference between Europe and the U.S. that could by itself account for European children's better dental health. In doing so, answer choice D creates the possibility that fluoride in water could be improving U.S. children's dental health, but not enough to overcome the bad results of their fewer visits to the dentist. Simplifying, in an argument that relies on a comparison between European children and U.S. children, an answer that introduces a difference between them hurts the argument.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. Answer choice B perfectly fits our prephrase. It gets rid of a possible factor, diet, that could by itself make European children have better dental health. By getting rid of that possible difference between Europe and U.S. children, it strengthens the comparison the conclusion relies on, and makes it more likely that fluoride isn't really doing anything for U.S. children's teeth. In evaluating answer choice E, it may also be useful to imagine the scenario if the opposite of answer choice E were true. If the diets of children in the U.S. were generally worse for teeth than those of children in Europe, then it could be that the fluoride in U.S. water does help prevent tooth decay, but not enough to overcome the bad diets of U.S. children. The opposite of answer choice E would thus weaken the conclusion. This makes it a promising answer choice to strengthen the argument!
Strengthen. The correct answer choice is (E).
The argument relies on a comparison between the teeth of European children and children in the United States: European children have relatively healthier teeth (in terms of decayed, missing, and filled teeth) than U.S. children.
It concludes that fluoride in water (which the U.S. has and Europe does not) does not have a substantial tendency to prevent tooth decay.
The argument misses that there could be all kinds of other differences between European and U.S. children's dental health that could contribute to these data. Maybe European children eat foods more conducive to dental health. Or maybe European children have better access to dental care. Or maybe European children are better about following personal dental care regimes like brushing their teeth and flossing. If any of these things were true, THAT could be the reason European children are doing better than U.S. children. And, importantly, in those circumstances, it could still be true that fluoride in water has a substantial tendency to prevent tooth decay, just not enough to overcome those other things that U.S. children are doing worse at (having bad diets, or not having access to dentists, or not following personal tooth care regimens like brushing/flossing).
To strengthen the argument we need to look for an answer choice that gets rid of one of these possibilities, thus making the comparison between European and U.S. children a better comparison. In other words, we need to find an answer choice that says one of these alternative factors is NOT all that different between European and U.S. children.
Answer choice (A): The availability of toothpaste with fluoride in the U.S. and Europe tells us nothing about whether children in Europe and the U.S. are actually using the toothpaste, and without that information, we cannot determine answer choice A's impact on the argument. Thus it is irrelevant as stated, and incorrect.
Answer choice (B): Answer choice B is talking about a different form of fluoride use than that in the conclusion (which is specifically about fluoride in water). More importantly, answer choice B says nothing about dental practice in Europe, so it cannot shed any light on the argument's comparison between European and U.S. children. Thus it is irrelevant and incorrect.
Answer choice (C): Like answer choice A, answer choice C as stated doesn't give us enough information to understand the impact on dental health of European and U.S. children. How is the hygiene taught in both Europe and the U.S. (similarly or differently)? How well do children apply the lessons they're taught in both Europe and the U.S. (well or poorly, similarly or differently)? Without knowing more, answer choice C does not shed light on whether the comparison in the stimulus is good or bad. Thus it is irrelevant as stated, and incorrect.
Answer choice (D): Answer choice D weakens the argument. It raises one of the possibilities the argument forgot about, a potential difference between Europe and the U.S. that could by itself account for European children's better dental health. In doing so, answer choice D creates the possibility that fluoride in water could be improving U.S. children's dental health, but not enough to overcome the bad results of their fewer visits to the dentist. Simplifying, in an argument that relies on a comparison between European children and U.S. children, an answer that introduces a difference between them hurts the argument.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. Answer choice B perfectly fits our prephrase. It gets rid of a possible factor, diet, that could by itself make European children have better dental health. By getting rid of that possible difference between Europe and U.S. children, it strengthens the comparison the conclusion relies on, and makes it more likely that fluoride isn't really doing anything for U.S. children's teeth. In evaluating answer choice E, it may also be useful to imagine the scenario if the opposite of answer choice E were true. If the diets of children in the U.S. were generally worse for teeth than those of children in Europe, then it could be that the fluoride in U.S. water does help prevent tooth decay, but not enough to overcome the bad diets of U.S. children. The opposite of answer choice E would thus weaken the conclusion. This makes it a promising answer choice to strengthen the argument!