- Thu Sep 20, 2018 10:00 am
#58130
The time period here doesn't matter all that much, because the author isn't claiming that hairless dogs can never emerge on two separate occasions, but only that is unlikely that they would do so. If hairless dogs also emerged in, say, New Zealand several centuries ago, his argument would be mostly unaffected, because it could still be unlikely for them to have emerged separately in Mexico and Peru.
I suppose one could call this a False Dilemma, because the author leaves out other possibilities, such as traders going overland despite the difficulty, or large birds carrying the dogs over the mountains, or the dogs swimming from one place to the other, etc., but your proposed change to answer A would still not make it a good answer because it doesn't address those alternate possibilities. When an author is guilty of a False Dilemma, his assumption is that there were no other possibilities for the observed phenomenon, and dogs appearing elsewhere centuries ago doesn't do anything to address how they got from Mexico to Peru or vice versa. We'd need more. For example:
"Hairless dogs were not transported to both Mexico and Peru centuries ago by overland travel from Nicaragua."
or
"Several centuries ago the overland routes between Mexico and Peru were not substantially easier to traverse than they are now."
We can probably come up with more assumptions for this one, but the mere absence of hairless dogs elsewhere is not a required assumption of the argument, since "unlikely" isn't "impossible" or "never."
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
Follow me on Twitter at
https://twitter.com/LSATadam