- Sat Jan 21, 2012 12:00 am
#36496
Complete Question Explanation
Resolve the Paradox. The correct answer choice is (B)
The energy analyst’s comments concern record breaking heat that has been plaguing the region.
As a result of the heat wave, air conditioning use has apparently increased significantly, leading to
an overload of the city’s electrical grid, causing blackouts to occur in various regional locations.
Local residents have been asked, on a voluntary basis, to reduce their use of air conditioners, but the
analyst says that even if residents comply, the blackouts are likely to continue until the heat wave
ends.
If the blackouts are likely to continue despite local residents’ compliance with the request to cut
back on air conditioner use, that means that there must be other reasons for the blackouts. Since
the stimulus is followed by a Resolve the Paradox question, the correct answer choice will most
likely provide some alternative cause of the referenced blackouts which would exist even with local
residents’s compliance.
Answer choice (A): The analyst specifies that air conditioner use has overloaded the region’s
electrical power grid. There are likely to be other significant drains on the region’s electrical grid,
but this would not explain why the blackouts would be expected to keep happening for as long as the
heat wave continues, in spite of possibly willingness on the part of local residents’ to comply with
the request to cut back on air conditioning use.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice, since this is the choice that resolves the
paradox presented by the energy analyst. If the majority of the region’s air conditioning is used
by businesses and factories, rather than residences, that would explain why blackouts are likely to
continue even if residents comply with the request to cut back—residents use of air conditioning
makes up only a small part of the air conditioning used in the region, so their cutbacks could have
very limited effect.
Answer choice (C): This choice tells us that most air conditioning systems could be made more
energy efficient with some basic design changes. While this choice provides one way to attack the
problem of an exhausted electrical grid, it does not explain why the blackouts are likely to continue
for as long as the heat wave lasts, even if the region’s residents comply with the request and cut back
on their air conditioning use. Since it does not resolve the paradox in this case, this choice can be
ruled out of contention.
Answer choice (D): This choice provides that the region’s residents are not likely to comply with
the request to cut back on their use of air conditioning, but even if the residents don’t comply with
this request, that is not relevant to the energy analyst’s argument and would not resolve the paradox,
which is that the blackouts are likely to continue even if local residents comply. Since this choice
fails to resolve the paradox presented, it should be eliminated.
Answer choice (E): If, as this choice provides, the heat is expected to drop off in the near future, that
might be great news for the region, but the paradox presented here is that the blackouts are likely to
continue for as long as the heat wave lasts, even if residents comply with the request. How much
longer the heat wave lasts is irrelevant, and even if the heat wave were to end tomorrow, that would
not resolve the paradox presented by the analyst.
Resolve the Paradox. The correct answer choice is (B)
The energy analyst’s comments concern record breaking heat that has been plaguing the region.
As a result of the heat wave, air conditioning use has apparently increased significantly, leading to
an overload of the city’s electrical grid, causing blackouts to occur in various regional locations.
Local residents have been asked, on a voluntary basis, to reduce their use of air conditioners, but the
analyst says that even if residents comply, the blackouts are likely to continue until the heat wave
ends.
If the blackouts are likely to continue despite local residents’ compliance with the request to cut
back on air conditioner use, that means that there must be other reasons for the blackouts. Since
the stimulus is followed by a Resolve the Paradox question, the correct answer choice will most
likely provide some alternative cause of the referenced blackouts which would exist even with local
residents’s compliance.
Answer choice (A): The analyst specifies that air conditioner use has overloaded the region’s
electrical power grid. There are likely to be other significant drains on the region’s electrical grid,
but this would not explain why the blackouts would be expected to keep happening for as long as the
heat wave continues, in spite of possibly willingness on the part of local residents’ to comply with
the request to cut back on air conditioning use.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice, since this is the choice that resolves the
paradox presented by the energy analyst. If the majority of the region’s air conditioning is used
by businesses and factories, rather than residences, that would explain why blackouts are likely to
continue even if residents comply with the request to cut back—residents use of air conditioning
makes up only a small part of the air conditioning used in the region, so their cutbacks could have
very limited effect.
Answer choice (C): This choice tells us that most air conditioning systems could be made more
energy efficient with some basic design changes. While this choice provides one way to attack the
problem of an exhausted electrical grid, it does not explain why the blackouts are likely to continue
for as long as the heat wave lasts, even if the region’s residents comply with the request and cut back
on their air conditioning use. Since it does not resolve the paradox in this case, this choice can be
ruled out of contention.
Answer choice (D): This choice provides that the region’s residents are not likely to comply with
the request to cut back on their use of air conditioning, but even if the residents don’t comply with
this request, that is not relevant to the energy analyst’s argument and would not resolve the paradox,
which is that the blackouts are likely to continue even if local residents comply. Since this choice
fails to resolve the paradox presented, it should be eliminated.
Answer choice (E): If, as this choice provides, the heat is expected to drop off in the near future, that
might be great news for the region, but the paradox presented here is that the blackouts are likely to
continue for as long as the heat wave lasts, even if residents comply with the request. How much
longer the heat wave lasts is irrelevant, and even if the heat wave were to end tomorrow, that would
not resolve the paradox presented by the analyst.