- PowerScore Staff
- Posts: 75
- Joined: Jun 30, 2021
- Mon Aug 16, 2021 5:55 pm
#89771
Hi Visitor! Thanks so much for your great question
The main issue with your analysis is the cause that you identify, which is why you're getting tripped up by the idea of two causes and the word "and." Let's break down the stimulus to isolate the causal reasoning here: the author concludes that fish raised in experimental hatcheries are more likely to survive. Why? Because those from the experimental hatcheries are "bolder." The author defines "bolder" as exploring new environments and trying new food. The cause that the author relates to the effect of greater likelihood of survival is whether the fish are bolder.
However, there's a gap in the author's reasoning between being bold and being more likely to survive, so I would anticipate the correct answer choice to be a Supporter Assumption that bridges this gap.
Answer choice (C) helps us bridge that gap and is therefore the incorrect answer. If we negate answer choice (C), we get the following: No fish raised in traditional hatcheries die because of being too timid in foraging for food. This negation weakens the author's conclusion that a fish being bolder makes them more likely to survive. If fish in traditional hatcheries aren't dying because of their timidity in foraging for food (the opposite of being bold), then this casts doubt on the idea that the fish from experimental hatcheries survive because they are bolder since fish that aren't bold are also surviving despite their timidity.
Returning to your analysis: the cause that the author identifies is that the fish from the experimental hatcheries are bolder. In your analysis, you identify two causes that contribute to their greater survival: exploring new environments and trying new foods. However, the author ties boldness to likelihood of survival, which is the cause in the causal relationship. The role that exploring new environments and trying new foods plays in the argument is that it is how the author defines boldness.
I hope this helps, and let me know if you have any other questions!
The main issue with your analysis is the cause that you identify, which is why you're getting tripped up by the idea of two causes and the word "and." Let's break down the stimulus to isolate the causal reasoning here: the author concludes that fish raised in experimental hatcheries are more likely to survive. Why? Because those from the experimental hatcheries are "bolder." The author defines "bolder" as exploring new environments and trying new food. The cause that the author relates to the effect of greater likelihood of survival is whether the fish are bolder.
However, there's a gap in the author's reasoning between being bold and being more likely to survive, so I would anticipate the correct answer choice to be a Supporter Assumption that bridges this gap.
Answer choice (C) helps us bridge that gap and is therefore the incorrect answer. If we negate answer choice (C), we get the following: No fish raised in traditional hatcheries die because of being too timid in foraging for food. This negation weakens the author's conclusion that a fish being bolder makes them more likely to survive. If fish in traditional hatcheries aren't dying because of their timidity in foraging for food (the opposite of being bold), then this casts doubt on the idea that the fish from experimental hatcheries survive because they are bolder since fish that aren't bold are also surviving despite their timidity.
Returning to your analysis: the cause that the author identifies is that the fish from the experimental hatcheries are bolder. In your analysis, you identify two causes that contribute to their greater survival: exploring new environments and trying new foods. However, the author ties boldness to likelihood of survival, which is the cause in the causal relationship. The role that exploring new environments and trying new foods plays in the argument is that it is how the author defines boldness.
I hope this helps, and let me know if you have any other questions!