- Fri Jun 29, 2018 11:38 am
#47212
Official Explanation
The stimulus in this problem indicates that the menu at Jason's restaurant serves no food that contains products grown with chemical pesticides, and then concludes that "this cannot be true." The premises cited are that Yu was at Kelly's Grocery—which is the source of the restaurant's produce—and saw produce there coming from MegaFarm, which uses chemical pesticides. It's a classic "guilt by association" scenario.
The argument being made here is relatively easy to understand (I saw them shopping at a place that sells produce with chemical pesticides, so it can't be true they are a pesticide-free restaurant), but is it a good argument? No, definitely not. The biggest hole is that while Kelly's sells MegaFarm produce, there's no assurance that Jason purchased any of it. What if he simply avoided all the MegaFarm produce and made sure to purchase pesticide-free produce? From a prephrasing standpoint, answers that revolve around this idea should be on your radar.
Answer choice (A): This would strengthen Yu's claim more than hurt it. If Jason has no idea that there is pesticide-laden produce at Kelly's, it could be the case that he's purchased some of it, which would invalidate his claim and strengthen Yu's.
Answer choice (B): While this helps show that Jason isn't getting produce with pesticides elsewhere, it tells us nothing about what is occurring when he shops at Kelly's. Since Yu made a specific argument based on Kelly's, this answer has no effect on his conclusion.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer. If this is the case, then Jason could very easily identify the pesticide fruit, and avoid it. that would allow Jason to continue to serve only pesticide-free produce, and would undermine Yu's conclusion.
Answer choice (D): This answer just indicates that the pesticides used have been government-approved as safe, but it doesn't tell us whether Jason is or isn't buying said produce, or can even identify it. this answer does nothing for the argument.
Answer choice (E): The actions of "most people" while at Kelly's is irrelevant to what Jason does when at Kelly's, and so this answer tells us nothing about the validity of Yu's conclusion.
The stimulus in this problem indicates that the menu at Jason's restaurant serves no food that contains products grown with chemical pesticides, and then concludes that "this cannot be true." The premises cited are that Yu was at Kelly's Grocery—which is the source of the restaurant's produce—and saw produce there coming from MegaFarm, which uses chemical pesticides. It's a classic "guilt by association" scenario.
The argument being made here is relatively easy to understand (I saw them shopping at a place that sells produce with chemical pesticides, so it can't be true they are a pesticide-free restaurant), but is it a good argument? No, definitely not. The biggest hole is that while Kelly's sells MegaFarm produce, there's no assurance that Jason purchased any of it. What if he simply avoided all the MegaFarm produce and made sure to purchase pesticide-free produce? From a prephrasing standpoint, answers that revolve around this idea should be on your radar.
Answer choice (A): This would strengthen Yu's claim more than hurt it. If Jason has no idea that there is pesticide-laden produce at Kelly's, it could be the case that he's purchased some of it, which would invalidate his claim and strengthen Yu's.
Answer choice (B): While this helps show that Jason isn't getting produce with pesticides elsewhere, it tells us nothing about what is occurring when he shops at Kelly's. Since Yu made a specific argument based on Kelly's, this answer has no effect on his conclusion.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer. If this is the case, then Jason could very easily identify the pesticide fruit, and avoid it. that would allow Jason to continue to serve only pesticide-free produce, and would undermine Yu's conclusion.
Answer choice (D): This answer just indicates that the pesticides used have been government-approved as safe, but it doesn't tell us whether Jason is or isn't buying said produce, or can even identify it. this answer does nothing for the argument.
Answer choice (E): The actions of "most people" while at Kelly's is irrelevant to what Jason does when at Kelly's, and so this answer tells us nothing about the validity of Yu's conclusion.