- Mon May 23, 2022 11:42 am
#95460
Because that's not the conclusion, sofisofi!
There is only one main conclusion in any argument, and since you recognize that B captures that conclusion in this case, you should ask yourself what role answer D is playing in the overall argument. Does the author give us any evidence to support this claim? If not, then it is not a conclusion. Does the author use this claim to support another claim? If not, then it is not a premise. That's what's happening with the claim given in answer D - it gets no support and gives no support, so it is neither a premise nor a conclusion.
So what is it? There's no obvious label that we can apply, but if I had to describe that claim I would say something like "it delineates a sufficient criterion for the validity of the opposing conclusion." Or, if I didn't want to sound all fancy, I might say "it's something the author says would prove the microbiologists were right, if it was true."
The conclusion is the thing the author is trying to prove. The author here is not trying to prove that the microbiologists would be right if all bacteria was the same. They are trying to prove that the microbiologists are not right, and that the opposite of what they claimed is probably true.
Adam M. Tyson
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