by StaceyKoprince Mon Jan 07, 2013 1:21 pm
I agree with Tim that, sometimes, we just have to suck it up. I can't tell you the number of times I've wanted to argue with an official question. :) But my only real option is to figure out how THEY think / write questions / do things and respond accordingly.
We have so many "one little piece" posts here that I want to take a crack at laying out everything in one post:
Step 1: Q type = weaken
Step 2: deconstruct arg
LR Bs: 1 d
I Bs: 2d, one open at time
Intermed Concl: I more robb than LR
Final Concl: I uses 2d for security (as a result)
Step 3: State the Goal
On weaken Qs, we need something that makes the conclusion a little bit less likely to be true or valid. The correct answer will introduce something new, but that something new will address some assumption in the original argument.
So I want something that will make it at least a little less likely that I decided to use 2d specifically for security purposes or in response to the idea that there are more robberies.
What's the author assuming? He's assuming there actually are more robberies in I. He's assuming there isn't some other reason for using the 2d system, a reason that has nothing to do with security.
Step 4: Answer choices
(A) Only gives me figures for LR; tells me nothing about I. The conclusion is about I, so this neither strengthens or weakens the C.
(B) This offers an alternate reason to have a 2-door system where only one door opens at a time - it helps keep some of the cold air out in I, which isn't an issue in LR. If this is true, then it somewhat weakens the idea that I MUST have the 2-door system specifically in order to increase security (because there is now a possibility that the weather reason is the only reason they have the 2-door system).
(C) Locking the doors remotely is an improvement in security. If I uses this system in order to improve security, then that reinforces (strengthens) the conclusion.
(D) Doesn't address why I has a 2-door system, which is the heart of the conclusion.
(E) Doesn't address why I has a 2-door system, which is the heart of the conclusion.
Correct answer is B. It addresses one of the 2 assumptions that I brainstormed before looking at the answers: the author assumes that there is not an alternate reason why the banks would have these 2d systems.
Note: one of the objections above was that the (correct) answer didn't specifically spell out that the 2d system would protect against those harsh weather conditions. On strengthen / weaken questions, it isn't necessary to spell it out completely. It's only necessary to introduce something that COULD be an alternate explanation. If it is true that this harsh weather exists in I, then that could be one possible justification for the 2d system. And if that is a possible justification, then the guy's argument just got a little bit weaker. I could say, well, hey, wait a minute - how do you know that this MUST be because of security? Maybe it's just because the weather is so much colder in I. You haven't even given me any evidence that there are more bank robberies in I - you're just assuming it!
p.s. If you ever want to see these 2-door systems in use, come visit me in Montreal, where the temperature is currently a balmy 6 degrees fahrenheit. :) We all have them, even in our homes.
p.p.s. Though I did not write this question, something similar did actually happen to me once. A visiting relative thought that there must be serious security issues because all storefronts (including banks) had these double doors - was it to slow down / hinder robbers? I gently explained that it was because of winter. :) (It was summer at the time, so the reason for having this set-up was very out-of-sight, out-of-mind.)
Stacey Koprince
Instructor
Director, Content & Curriculum
ManhattanPrep