- Mon Jun 06, 2016 10:53 pm
#26232
May I offer a few additional thoughts on why (A) is right but (E) is not?
The question asks us to strengthen the position attributed to Steele and his colleagues, thus it’s important not to misinterpret what that position actually is. Per Lines 14-16: “he and his colleagues claim to have found evidence for a Lamarckian hereditary mechanism in the immune system”.
Though I failed to appreciate the distinction at first, that means that Steele’s position is not “Lamarck’s theory is right!”, it is the much more nuanced “We found evidence to support Lamarck’s theory”.
Lamarck’s theory is that “organisms change in adapting to their environment” (Lines 4-5) and that organisms can then “pass on to their offspring the new characteristics they have acquired” (Lines 5-7).
Steele explains his evidence this way: DNA can mutate (that’s already known), altered RNA reverts back into DNA (the “reverse transcription” that’s been observed frequently in other contexts), a virus carries the altered DNA to the reproductive cells and replaces the original DNA in those cells (other biologists aren’t yet sold on the last part).
Answer choice (A) strengthens Steele’s claim that he’s found evidence to support Lamarck’s theory. It does so by showing that the last part of Steele’s evidence chain (that other biologists have been quite skeptical about) can actually occur.
Answer choice (E) is wrong because it doesn’t strengthens Steele’s claim that he’s found evidence to support Lamarck’s theory. However, what (E) strengthens is Lamarck’s theory itself by providing an example of an organism that can pass on pass on an acquired characteristic to its offspring. How an organism does that (through DNA change or some other process) is irrelevant in regard to Lamarck’s claims. The danger with this question is that it’s very tempting to oversimplify Steele’s claim into being equivalent with Lamarck’s, making the wrong answer (E) seem very tempting.