- Wed Dec 02, 2020 1:21 pm
#81647
Stimulus:
Gives us a comparison statement:
Public water or bottled water: which is safer and cheaper?
According to the government study, public water is safer and cheaper
Last sentence tells us that despite these findings and their popularity, the sale of water bottles continues to go up.
It's a paradox question.
What if the bottled water companies are having a sweepstake to counter the possibly negative publicity, and the person who finds a special code underneath one of the bottle caps wins $1,000,000?
Answer Choices
A- the fact that bottled water could possible contain harmful ingredients is alarming, but it does nothing to help us figure out why people are willing to continue to buy more bottled water. If anything, this further fuels the questions of why people are willing to buy more bottled water
B- whether or not customers are able to tell a difference in taste between public water and bottled water doesn't help us answer the question of why they're willing to continue to purchase more bottled water
D- this completely contradicts our premise
I am stuck between C and E. When I was working on this section, my only hesitation with E was on whether or not water counts as "food." I figured that if people are doubting the government's validity, then they will dismiss the findings from this recent study, which would explain why people continue to purchase more bottled water. Am I making too many assumptions here? With C, I'm not sure how to interpret the last part that says "which accounted for the increase in sales." Is this literally saying, "this is why in the premise it says that even despite the scandal from the government study, the sales of bottled water continue to rise."
Would greatly appreciate some clarification.