- Sun May 15, 2022 5:31 pm
#95342
I tend to approach answers like this from a different angle, g_lawyered. It's not our job to prove that the answer is false; it's our job to select the one answer that is supported by the passage, and that means the wrong answers are not supported. That means an answer that might be true, but which has no support, would be a wrong answer. It's about NOT finding support, rather than finding something that disproves it. So, for example, if an answer said "some consumers prefer the texture of farmed cod to that of wild-caught cod," the passage wouldn't prove that was false, but it would be a wrong answer because there is no support for it in the passage. It's the lack of support that makes it wrong, not the evidence against it.
Answer A is wrong because there is no support for it. There's nothing there to suggest that anything other than humans could cause further declines. Maybe something other than human activity would cause further declines, and maybe not - there's just nothing in the text to support this position, and that's why it's a wrong answer.
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
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