- Fri Dec 20, 2019 10:43 am
#72660
Complete Question Explanation
Weaken, CE. The correct answer choice is (A).
In this question, you are asked to weaken a causal conclusion, specifically the conclusion that caffeine consumption is probably the primary cause of the higher incidence of broken bones in teenagers who drink large amounts of carbonated beverages with caffeine than in teenagers who do not.
The author of the stimulus bases that causal conclusion on an observed correlation in teenagers between drinking carbonated beverages containing caffeine and broken bones. The argument's premises shed light on how consuming caffeine might be a cause of broken bones, by telling us (1) that consuming caffeine causes people to excrete significantly more calcium than they would otherwise, and (2) that calcium deficiency can make bones more brittle.
The author has inappropriately assumed that a calcium deficiency in teenagers who drink carbonated beverages is primarily caused by the caffeine in those beverages, and not by something else. The conclusion will be undermined if an answer choice shows that such teenagers experience calcium deficiency for some reason other than drinking the caffeine in carbonated beverages.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice. The answer poses an alternate cause of the calcium deficiency in teenagers who drink carbonated beverages with caffeine. Rather than being calcium deficient because caffeine causes them to excrete calcium, the answer suggests these teenagers are calcium deficient (relative to their peers) because they are consuming less calcium.
Answer choice (B): This answer choice is irrelevant. The conclusion is about the "higher incidence" of broken bones in a certain teenage group (those who drink caffeine-containing carbonated beverages) versus another teenage group (those who do not drink such beverages). Comparing teens to older and younger people sheds no light on the specific comparison the conclusion addresses.
Answer choice (C): This answer choice is too weak to have any impact. Just because at least one teenager has a non-caffeine related calcium deficiency does not suggest that, overall, caffeine consumption is not a primary cause of broken bones. In other words, a single outlier cannot disprove evidence from an average.
Answer choice (D): This answer choice is irrelevant. The stimulus tells us some of the more popular carbonated beverages contain "significant amounts of caffeine." The fact that non-popular carbonated beverages contain even more than that "significant amount" doesn't undermine the premise, and therefore does not weaken the conclusion.
Answer choice (E): This answer choice is irrelevant. We do not know the amount of calcium consumed by either group of teenagers referenced in the argument, so this answer choice cannot affect the argument.
Weaken, CE. The correct answer choice is (A).
In this question, you are asked to weaken a causal conclusion, specifically the conclusion that caffeine consumption is probably the primary cause of the higher incidence of broken bones in teenagers who drink large amounts of carbonated beverages with caffeine than in teenagers who do not.
The author of the stimulus bases that causal conclusion on an observed correlation in teenagers between drinking carbonated beverages containing caffeine and broken bones. The argument's premises shed light on how consuming caffeine might be a cause of broken bones, by telling us (1) that consuming caffeine causes people to excrete significantly more calcium than they would otherwise, and (2) that calcium deficiency can make bones more brittle.
The author has inappropriately assumed that a calcium deficiency in teenagers who drink carbonated beverages is primarily caused by the caffeine in those beverages, and not by something else. The conclusion will be undermined if an answer choice shows that such teenagers experience calcium deficiency for some reason other than drinking the caffeine in carbonated beverages.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice. The answer poses an alternate cause of the calcium deficiency in teenagers who drink carbonated beverages with caffeine. Rather than being calcium deficient because caffeine causes them to excrete calcium, the answer suggests these teenagers are calcium deficient (relative to their peers) because they are consuming less calcium.
Answer choice (B): This answer choice is irrelevant. The conclusion is about the "higher incidence" of broken bones in a certain teenage group (those who drink caffeine-containing carbonated beverages) versus another teenage group (those who do not drink such beverages). Comparing teens to older and younger people sheds no light on the specific comparison the conclusion addresses.
Answer choice (C): This answer choice is too weak to have any impact. Just because at least one teenager has a non-caffeine related calcium deficiency does not suggest that, overall, caffeine consumption is not a primary cause of broken bones. In other words, a single outlier cannot disprove evidence from an average.
Answer choice (D): This answer choice is irrelevant. The stimulus tells us some of the more popular carbonated beverages contain "significant amounts of caffeine." The fact that non-popular carbonated beverages contain even more than that "significant amount" doesn't undermine the premise, and therefore does not weaken the conclusion.
Answer choice (E): This answer choice is irrelevant. We do not know the amount of calcium consumed by either group of teenagers referenced in the argument, so this answer choice cannot affect the argument.