What does the Question Stem tell us?
Principle (Strengthen)
Break down the Stimulus:
Conclusion: Using TMD on peaches is not shown to be an acceptable practice.
Evidence: Using TMD on peaches would harm 20% of peach eaters.
Any prephrase?
Principle Strengthen answer choices are almost always conditional statements. We want a rule that is triggered by what we know in the Evidence and delivers us the language of the Conclusion. What do we know about using TMD in the Evidence that would allow us to say "using TMD on peaches has NOT been shown to be acceptable?" We know that is harms 20% of peach eaters. So we could pre-phrase a rule like, "If a practice harms 20% of people affected by it, that practice is not shown to be acceptable." There's a good chance some of the other counterpoint nuance (like that TMD is technically fine on average, for most) may get packaged into the correct answer. But really we just need a rule that's triggered by the 20% getting harmed and deliver us the idea of "not been shown to be acceptable practice".
Correct answer:
C
Answer choice analysis:
A) Lots of new stuff here. Doesn't seem like a bridge. This is helping us conclude "we should be cautious about assessing TMD's risk". That doesn't seem close enough to "TMD is not shown to be acceptable."
B) The trigger doesn't have anything to do with the 20% harmed, so move on. If we dug deeper, the 2nd half isn't as strong as the 2nd half of (C). And the left side of (B) isn't triggered. We actually know that most of the population is NOT likely to ingest a peach.
C) Yes! Contraposed: If a pesticide isn't used for its intended purpose OR it has NOT been shown to harm some portion of the population, then its use is unacceptable. That's pretty good? Since the rule has an OR trigger, we only need one of those ideas. Can we say that TMD has "NOT been shown to be harmless to all portions of the population"? In other words, can we say that TMD "might be harmful to at least some portion of the population? We don't have a great language match for that in the Evidence, but it's the best we get from these answer choices.
D) Contraposed: If avg doses are not low or if a pesticide HAS been shown to be harmful to children, then society has a special obligation to protect small children. Is that 2nd half close enough to "not shown to be an acceptable practice"? It's not as tight a fit as (C) was.
E) "Sometimes" is super weak (so it couldn't strengthen much). Also there's nothing in the argument about protection from one harm backfiring and turning into a greater harm. Pesticides are trying to protect crops from harm, not protect "the population".
Takeaway/Pattern: You can cut down on how much of a Principle-Strengthen answer choice you bother reading if you're clear on where the 2nd half your rule needs to take you (The Conclusion). Had we scanned for rules that allows to prove "something has NOT been shown to be an acceptable practice", we would essentially only have (C) to consider.
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