- Sat Nov 25, 2017 9:54 pm
#41892
Hi puppytiff!
In choosing between (B) and (A), one thing that is important to remember is that this strengthen question involves cause-and-effect reasoning.
In the end, what (B) seems to do is it just reiterates a premise--but it doesn't get to the cause and effect reasoning. Namely, "Deer are invading residential areas, damaging property and causing motor vehicle accidents that result in serious injury to motorists." is unpacked as "Motor vehicle accidents involving deer often result in damage to the vehicle, injury to the motorist, or both." In other words, (B) is repeating the part about the "injury to the motorist," and it's presumably the case that such an accident would also be "damaging property." So, theoretically, something like (B) might be a contender inasmuch as it provides new information that reinforces a premise, but that's unlikely because only supporting a premise won't necessarily get to the argument.
(A) also focuses on a couple premises, namely, "(1) Eight years ago hunting was banned in Greenfield County on the grounds that hunting endangers public safety. (2) Now the deer population in the county is six times what it was before the ban." (A) uses other counties to support that data--but it's not only supporting those premises on their own, it's supporting the implicit cause-and-effect relationship in those sentences, the relationship the conclusion is making an argument about.
(A) states, "In surrounding counties, where hunting is permitted, the size of the deer population has not increased in the last eight years." It's initially possible that the deer population rose to six times what it was before the ban, but that the rise in population had nothing to do with the ban. Answer (A) denies that possibility--it reiterates the cause-and-effect relationship by claiming, based on data from surrounding counties, it was indeed the ban that caused the increase in population. Given that (A) reinforces that, it thus reinforces the conclusion that Greenfield's ban was both unnecessary and created a danger to public safety that otherwise would not exist.
Hope that helps!
In choosing between (B) and (A), one thing that is important to remember is that this strengthen question involves cause-and-effect reasoning.
In the end, what (B) seems to do is it just reiterates a premise--but it doesn't get to the cause and effect reasoning. Namely, "Deer are invading residential areas, damaging property and causing motor vehicle accidents that result in serious injury to motorists." is unpacked as "Motor vehicle accidents involving deer often result in damage to the vehicle, injury to the motorist, or both." In other words, (B) is repeating the part about the "injury to the motorist," and it's presumably the case that such an accident would also be "damaging property." So, theoretically, something like (B) might be a contender inasmuch as it provides new information that reinforces a premise, but that's unlikely because only supporting a premise won't necessarily get to the argument.
(A) also focuses on a couple premises, namely, "(1) Eight years ago hunting was banned in Greenfield County on the grounds that hunting endangers public safety. (2) Now the deer population in the county is six times what it was before the ban." (A) uses other counties to support that data--but it's not only supporting those premises on their own, it's supporting the implicit cause-and-effect relationship in those sentences, the relationship the conclusion is making an argument about.
(A) states, "In surrounding counties, where hunting is permitted, the size of the deer population has not increased in the last eight years." It's initially possible that the deer population rose to six times what it was before the ban, but that the rise in population had nothing to do with the ban. Answer (A) denies that possibility--it reiterates the cause-and-effect relationship by claiming, based on data from surrounding counties, it was indeed the ban that caused the increase in population. Given that (A) reinforces that, it thus reinforces the conclusion that Greenfield's ban was both unnecessary and created a danger to public safety that otherwise would not exist.
Hope that helps!