Hi, may someone please look over my Blind Review explanations?
In addition, I just want to ask two more questions regarding AC (E):
1. How should the word "resistant" be read in the AC? That is, should it be understood as an adjective? Or should it be read as a noun? This will be further elaborated below when I write out my thoughts for (E).
2. When and how can we infer causality on the LSAT?
Stimulus Summary:
~Disease AND infected with virus → (Strains of tobacco ←s→ naturally resistant to TMV)
Experiment #1
Resistant strains experimented w/ virus → levels of naturally occurring salicylic acid increased 5x
Nonresistant strains experimented w/ virus → ~levels of naturally occurring salicylic acid increased 5x
Experiment #2
50 nonresistant exposed to TMV
25 injected with SA
25 not injected with SA
A.
Idk if the plants could be cured…
B.
This sounds like a really good AC… i like this one better than (E) bc it has less burden of proof… it just says salicylic acid has something to do with something in virus resistance… it just we don't know exactly what the relationship between SA and a strain’s resistance is…
C.
If anything.. It seems like there is SA… its just not as much as the resistant strains…
D.
Oh idk a particular tobacco strain’s resistance is confirmed….
E.
On the first glance, this AC really stumped me. I was caught between this and (B)... To further elaborate, the first part of this AC is really good. However, the latter half is what’s really troubling since its full of ambiguity and philosophical conundrums…. Its sort of ambiguous what “and thus the strains made resistant to tobacco mosaic virus” means since it seems like this sentence can be construed in two ways:
(i) it could mean that the increase in Salicylic Acid (SA) production causes the tobacco plants
to become resistant to the virus’s disease; or
(ii) it could mean that it causes the tobacco plant
to produce a resistant to the virus.
Either way, the sentence has to deal with SA being a cause. Given as such, there is no support for this AC because the stimulus never says anything about causation since the stimulus never
EXPLICITLY said that resistance is the effect of the increased SA production... The stimulus only says that SA and the virus’ disease have a strong correlation… This is why I chose (B) over (E).
this is the part I'm sort of confused on, and was wondering if I can get some feedback on this: In essence, the issue with (E) is that the stimulus says that some tobacco strains that produce SA five fold when infected with the virus are
intrinsically resistant to the virus' disease; meanwhile, this AC claims that the resistance of the strain is caused by its capacity to produced an increased rate of SA. This is what my train of thought is... but is this similar to what PowerScore staff, Robert Carroll, said above (on Wed Dec 18, 2013 7:03 pm)?
NOTE:Understandably, the second experiment messes us up by saying that those who got injected with SA didn't have the disease, but those who didn’t get injected by SA got the disease. In normal everyday circumstances, we are groomed to think that SA caused the resistance… however, in the LSAT this is simply a flawed method of reasoning. Although, now that I am thinking about it, I wonder how causality could be inferred on the LSAT?
Thanks ahead of time!