- Tue Jan 20, 2009 12:00 am
#73705
Complete Question Explanation
Weaken. The correct answer choice is (B).
An ethicist lays out a case against the consumption of meat, based on the disproportionate input/output ratio of nutrition. The amount of grain used to feed meat could feed more people than the meat being produced by that grain. Add to that the growing population and the shrinking availability of farmland, and the author believes that at some point eating meat will be seen as morally unacceptable. It would, per this argument, be wrong to reduce the total availability of nutrition by converting it inefficiently from grain to meat, implying that this might mean taking food out of peoples' mouths.
To weaken this argument, we need new information which will suggest that perhaps it would still be okay to consume meat under these circumstances. Perhaps the conversion of 16lbs of grain to 1lb of meat can be morally justified? Or at least, it might not be clearly immoral on these grounds? Look for an answer that suggests this might be the case.
Answer choice (A): A preference for meat has nothing to do with the moral acceptability of eating it, so this does not harm the argument in any way.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. The argument implies that the grain being fed to animals to produce meat for consumption should instead be fed directly to humans, feeding more people in the process. This answer tells us that we could not do this, because the land on which the animals feed could not produce food for humans. In fact, if this answer is true, it means that raising animals on this land to produce meat actually increases the total amount of food available to the human population, because it means that inedible (by humans) grains are being converted to edible meat.
Answer choice (C): This answer might actually strengthen the argument, because it suggests that meat production is not required to meet the nutritional requirements of humans. We can replace that nutritional content with something else that is not derived from animals.
Answer choice (D): A confusing answer to say the least, this one does nothing to suggest that the author is incorrect. This is because the answer only deals with farmland near metropolitan areas, but fails to address farmland in general (which we are told is rapidly going out of production), population growth, or the input-output imbalance between grain and meat. If we stop suburban development and all live in cities, but the population continues to grow, won't we still at some point be unable to afford converting 16lbs of grain into 1lb of meat, even if some farmland is restored?
Answer choice (E): The author never argues that grains should be the sole source of nutrition. He might be fine with also eating fruits, vegetables, poultry, fish, legumes, etc. Thus, this claim does not raise an objection to the argument, and so does not weaken it.
Weaken. The correct answer choice is (B).
An ethicist lays out a case against the consumption of meat, based on the disproportionate input/output ratio of nutrition. The amount of grain used to feed meat could feed more people than the meat being produced by that grain. Add to that the growing population and the shrinking availability of farmland, and the author believes that at some point eating meat will be seen as morally unacceptable. It would, per this argument, be wrong to reduce the total availability of nutrition by converting it inefficiently from grain to meat, implying that this might mean taking food out of peoples' mouths.
To weaken this argument, we need new information which will suggest that perhaps it would still be okay to consume meat under these circumstances. Perhaps the conversion of 16lbs of grain to 1lb of meat can be morally justified? Or at least, it might not be clearly immoral on these grounds? Look for an answer that suggests this might be the case.
Answer choice (A): A preference for meat has nothing to do with the moral acceptability of eating it, so this does not harm the argument in any way.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. The argument implies that the grain being fed to animals to produce meat for consumption should instead be fed directly to humans, feeding more people in the process. This answer tells us that we could not do this, because the land on which the animals feed could not produce food for humans. In fact, if this answer is true, it means that raising animals on this land to produce meat actually increases the total amount of food available to the human population, because it means that inedible (by humans) grains are being converted to edible meat.
Answer choice (C): This answer might actually strengthen the argument, because it suggests that meat production is not required to meet the nutritional requirements of humans. We can replace that nutritional content with something else that is not derived from animals.
Answer choice (D): A confusing answer to say the least, this one does nothing to suggest that the author is incorrect. This is because the answer only deals with farmland near metropolitan areas, but fails to address farmland in general (which we are told is rapidly going out of production), population growth, or the input-output imbalance between grain and meat. If we stop suburban development and all live in cities, but the population continues to grow, won't we still at some point be unable to afford converting 16lbs of grain into 1lb of meat, even if some farmland is restored?
Answer choice (E): The author never argues that grains should be the sole source of nutrition. He might be fine with also eating fruits, vegetables, poultry, fish, legumes, etc. Thus, this claim does not raise an objection to the argument, and so does not weaken it.