I didn't like any of the answer choices, but I comfortably eliminated D. I still fail to see how D is even remotely parallel to the stimulus. Additionally, what makes A incorrect? Isn't the general point of the argument that you shouldn't do things too quickly? Doesn't A do this? How does the reasoning in D capture this idea?

0

1 comments

  • Tuesday, Oct 20 2015

    X can survive Y, as long as Z doesn't occur (/Z). Thus, the reason why /X is obtaining isn't because of Y, but because Z is occurring.

    Species (X) can survive environmental change (Y), as long as it's not too rapid (/Z). Thus, the threat to survival (/X) is not because of change itself (Y), but because it is too rapid (Z IS occurring).

    D: people (X) don't fear change (Y)/can survive change, as long as they are not uninformed (/Z). Thus, the reason why people are scared (/X) isn't because of change (Y), but because they are not informed (Z is occurring).

    0

Confirm action

Are you sure?