- Fri Jan 01, 2021 7:40 pm
#101243
Complete Question Explanation
Must Be True. The correct answer choice is (B).
This stimulus can be broken into several conditional statements. First, we are told that "only primates have opposable thumbs." This can be diagrammed as:
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. This follows from a combination of the second and third piece of conditional reasoning above:
Answer choice (C): We don't know this, and the stimulus doesn't mention nocturnal at all. Rather, it only mentions that some lemurs "are the only living --lower-- primates that are diurnal." So that suggests the rest of lower primates are nocturnal (since they are not diurnal). However, this answer choice is a claim about --higher- primates being nocturnal, which we don't have information about in the stimulus.
Answer choice (D): We know that if a creature has opposable thumbs, then it is a primate. However, we don't know this because the stimulus does not tell us about those without thumbs. It's possible based on the material that some primates don't have thumbs, but the stimulus doesn't say one way or another.
Answer choice (E): We don't know this. We know that some lemurs are diurnal, suggesting that the others are nocturnal. The stimulus would have to say something like "all" lemurs are diurnal for it to be true that there are no nocturnal lemurs.
Must Be True. The correct answer choice is (B).
This stimulus can be broken into several conditional statements. First, we are told that "only primates have opposable thumbs." This can be diagrammed as:
Opposable thumbs PrimateWe're also told that "lemurs are lower primates and the only primates indigenous to Madagascar." This can be diagrammed as:
Lemur (lower) primateWe're told that "Some species of lemurs are the only living lower primates that are diurnal," or:
Primate indigenous to Madagascar Lemur
Lemur diurnalFinally, we're told, "All higher primates are thought to have evolved from a single diurnal species of lower primates."
(Higher) primate evolved from diurnal lower primateAnswer choice (A): We don't know this to be true. We know that higher primates, including the chimpanzee, evolved from diurnal lower primates. We also know that lemurs are lower primates and some of them are diurnal. But we don't know that they are the specific lower primate from which chimpanzees evolved (it might have been a different diurnal lower primate).
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. This follows from a combination of the second and third piece of conditional reasoning above:
Primate indigenous to Madagascar Lemur (lower) primateThat is, if a primate is indigenous to Madagascar, then we know that primate is a lemur, which is a lower primate.
Answer choice (C): We don't know this, and the stimulus doesn't mention nocturnal at all. Rather, it only mentions that some lemurs "are the only living --lower-- primates that are diurnal." So that suggests the rest of lower primates are nocturnal (since they are not diurnal). However, this answer choice is a claim about --higher- primates being nocturnal, which we don't have information about in the stimulus.
Answer choice (D): We know that if a creature has opposable thumbs, then it is a primate. However, we don't know this because the stimulus does not tell us about those without thumbs. It's possible based on the material that some primates don't have thumbs, but the stimulus doesn't say one way or another.
Answer choice (E): We don't know this. We know that some lemurs are diurnal, suggesting that the others are nocturnal. The stimulus would have to say something like "all" lemurs are diurnal for it to be true that there are no nocturnal lemurs.