Albert: Swenson's popular book, which argues that sun exposure does not harm skin cells, is a model of poor scholarship. ████████████ ██ ██ ████████ ███████ ██ ███ ██████████ ███ ████████ ██ ███ █████████
███████ ██████ ███████ ███ ███ █████ ██ ████ ███ ████ █ █████ ██ ████████ ███████ ██ ██████████ ████████████████
Albert claims that Swenson’s book is valuable, despite its major scientific flaws. Why could that be? Because the problems with the book have led to new, useful research about sun exposure.
Yvonne thinks that that stimulating new research is not enough to make Swenson’s book valuable (although this conclusion is implied, not explicit). To support this point, Yvonne uses an analogy: it would be ridiculous to say that a virus is valuable because it leads to new epidemiology research. Swenson’s book is held to be analogous to the virus, so stimulating research alone doesn’t make it valuable.
We need to find a point of disagreement. Albert and Yvonne disagree about whether stimulating new research makes Swenson’s book valuable.
The dialogue provides the most ███████ ███ ███ █████ ████ ██████ ███ ██████ ████████ ████ ███████
sun exposure harms ████ █████
Swenson's book is █ █████ ██ ████ ███████████
Swenson's book should ██ ██████████ ████████
Swenson's book has ██████████ ███ ████████ ██ ███ ████████
something that does ███ █████████ ███ ████████ ███ ████ █████