Question Type:
Weaken
Stimulus Breakdown:
Conclusion: This pesticide would not harm humans if absorbed into edible plants.
Evidence: Ounce for ounce, the activite ingredient in the pesticide is less toxic than the active ingredient in mouthwash.
Answer Anticipation:
We're assuming that mouthwash is not hazardous to humans. We're also assuming that the amount of the pesticide you'd ingest by eating plants treated with it is close to the amount of mouthwash you ingest. Even though the toxin in alcohol is, ounce for ounce, less toxic than the toxin in arsenic, I could still harm myself by ingesting enough alcohol. Similarly, this pesticide could still be harmful if humans absorbed enough of it.
Correct Answer:
B
Answer Choice Analysis:
(A) We don't care about comparing mouthwash to other human products.
(B) Yes! This sounds like the pesticide would be more harmful than mouthwash. It addresses the TOTAL quantity of toxins consumed, as opposed to the way less relevant measurement of toxins per ounce.
(C) This has no connection to the evidence about mouthwash, so this isn't weakening the reasoning in the argument. It DOES make it sound like the pesticide's packaging acknowledges the potential hazard to humans, but the package is probably referring to the danger of getting the pesticide directly into your mouth (not the danger of eating plants that were treated with this pesticide).
(D) This would strengthen, since it makes the pesticide sound LESS harmful than mouthwash.
(E) This doesn't help us evaluate the mouthwash vs. pesticide claim.
Takeaway/Pattern: Like most correct answers to Weaken, this allows us to say "your evidence is true, but I can still arrive at the opposite conclusion". "Pesticide has less toxin ounce for ounce, but since you ingest more toxins total with pesticide than with mouthwash, it's still possible that pesticides pose a hazard to humans".
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