(1) A 1970s survey wherein the more frequently people engaged in aerobic exercise, the lower their risk of lung disease tended to be.
(2) Subsequent surveys yielded the same finding.
(1) The causal relationship could be reversed—people at lower risk of lung disease might gravitate toward aerobic exercise. Maybe healthy lungs make aerobics more fun!
(2) Some other factor could be causing the correlation—maybe something else (maybe living somewhere with good air quality?) causes people to both do aerobic exercise and be at lower risk for lung disease.
A
ignores anecdotal evidence and bases its conclusion entirely on scientific research
B
considers only surveys published in one particular medical journal
C
concludes merely from the fact that two things are correlated that one causes the other
D
presumes, without providing justification, that anyone who does not have lung disease is in good health
E
fails to consider that even infrequent aerobic exercise may have some beneficial effect on people’s health
Cynthia: If the transit authority tries that maneuver, the federal government will probably just let the authority go out of business. The transit authority cannot risk allowing that to happen.
A
the transit authority should continue operating without cutting service or increasing fares until it has exhausted its funds
B
the federal government should provide additional funding to the transit authority
C
it would be better for the transit authority to cut services than it would be to raise fares
D
the federal government is willing to provide additional funding to the transit authority now
E
the transit authority can afford to operate for the next twelve months without cutting service even if it does not receive additional funding
Rose: Let’s not see the movie Winter Fields. I caught a review of it in the local paper and it was the worst review I’ve read in years.
Chester: I don’t understand why that might make you not want to see the movie. And besides, nothing in that paper is particularly well written.
Summary
Rose: The local paper had one of the worst reviews of Winter Fields I’ve ever read. Therefore, we should not see that movie.
Chester: Nothing in that paper is well written. I don’t understand why that would make you not want to see the movie.
Strongly Supported Conclusions
Chester thought Rose was referring to the review itself being poorly written, whereas Rose meant that the review gave the movie a bad rating.
A
see the movie
This answer is unsupported. Chester did not misunderstand what Rose meant by “let’s not see the movie.”
B
caught a review
This answer is unsupported. Chester did not misunderstand what Rose meant by “caught a review.” Chester understands that Rose read a particular review.
C
local paper
This answer is unsupported. Chester did not misunderstand what Rose meant by seeing a review in the local paper.
D
worst review
This answer is strongly supported. Chester thought Rose was referring to the review itself being poorly written, whereas Rose meant that the review gave the movie a bad rating.
E
in years
This answer is unsupported. Chester did not misunderstand that the review Rose read was the worst she had read in years.
A
Lewis has extensive experience in national politics, but not in city politics.
B
Prodevelopment mayoral candidates in Bensburg generally attract more financial backing for their campaigns.
C
Bensburg is facing serious new problems that most voters attribute to overdevelopment.
D
Lewis once worked as an aide to a prodevelopment mayor of Bensburg.
E
Chu was not thought of as a prodevelopment politician before this election.