- Fri Apr 29, 2016 1:55 pm
#23660
Complete Question Explanation
Strengthen. The correct answer choice is (C)
In this stimulus the author presents only one premise and then draws a causal conclusion. People develop distaste for foods that make them sick is the only premise. This explains why children don't like some foods. There is a completely new element in the conclusion: children. This element needs to be connected to the premise in order to strengthen the causal argument. There is also an element in the premise, sickness, that is not present in the conclusion. We need to connect these two lonely elements of the argument. If this were a weaken question, we would attack this gap in the reasoning.
Answer Choice (A): This answer choice is incorrect because if actually weakens the argument. If children are more likely to get food without distinctive flavor, they are less likely to develop aversions.
Answer Choice (B): This answer choice is incorrect because it is entirely unrelated to the stimulus. If anything, this answer offers another reason for children to develop aversions: they don't see the health benefits of some foods so they go by taste alone.
Answer Choice (C): This is the correct answer choice. It fills in the gap that the stimulus is missing. Children tend to have more acute taste and become sick, which connects the element in the premise, sickness, with the new element in the conclusion, children. If children are more likely to become sick, they are more likely to develop distaste, based on the premise.
Answer Choice (D): This answer choice is incorrect because it is dealing with recovering from sickness, which has nothing to do with actually getting sick or developing a distaste for food.
Answer Choice (E): This answer choice is incorrect because it focuses on children refusing to eat unfamiliar foods. If a child has never tasted a food, he or she cannot develop a distaste for that food, so this answer choice is unrelated to our argument about sickness and distaste for certain foods in children after they have eaten them.
Strengthen. The correct answer choice is (C)
In this stimulus the author presents only one premise and then draws a causal conclusion. People develop distaste for foods that make them sick is the only premise. This explains why children don't like some foods. There is a completely new element in the conclusion: children. This element needs to be connected to the premise in order to strengthen the causal argument. There is also an element in the premise, sickness, that is not present in the conclusion. We need to connect these two lonely elements of the argument. If this were a weaken question, we would attack this gap in the reasoning.
Answer Choice (A): This answer choice is incorrect because if actually weakens the argument. If children are more likely to get food without distinctive flavor, they are less likely to develop aversions.
Answer Choice (B): This answer choice is incorrect because it is entirely unrelated to the stimulus. If anything, this answer offers another reason for children to develop aversions: they don't see the health benefits of some foods so they go by taste alone.
Answer Choice (C): This is the correct answer choice. It fills in the gap that the stimulus is missing. Children tend to have more acute taste and become sick, which connects the element in the premise, sickness, with the new element in the conclusion, children. If children are more likely to become sick, they are more likely to develop distaste, based on the premise.
Answer Choice (D): This answer choice is incorrect because it is dealing with recovering from sickness, which has nothing to do with actually getting sick or developing a distaste for food.
Answer Choice (E): This answer choice is incorrect because it focuses on children refusing to eat unfamiliar foods. If a child has never tasted a food, he or she cannot develop a distaste for that food, so this answer choice is unrelated to our argument about sickness and distaste for certain foods in children after they have eaten them.