If someone can help me understand this question, I would be most appreciative. I have been staring at it for the last 15 minutes, I looked at the Manhattan explanation (on their forums) and was not satisfied, it really does not make sense to me.
If someone could help me, I would be most appreciative! Please,
please help me!
Comments
Conclusion: It is likely that the remaining skilled workers in Eastern Europe are in high demand in their home countries.
Well, maybe, but the conclusion doesn't necessarily follow from the premise. Maybe the workers left their jobs because the jobs don't exist anymore? In which case, there's no reason to think that the remaining workers would be in high demand. That would be a good weakener, and it's what answer choice (B) tells us.
(A) would strengthen rather than weaken- if they prefer to hire workers from their home countries, then it should be likely that the remaining workers are in high demand in their home countries.
(C) is irrelevant- what the workers who left now do in the West doesn't affect whether or not the remaining workers are in high demand.
(D) doesn't weaken- if anything, it would strengthen the argument: If they are planning on training new workers, that should imply that the remaining workers that don't need to be trained would be in high demand.
(E) would strengthen rather than weaken- if there are many positions left unfilled, the remaining skilled workers should be in high demand.
Hope that helps
The question I am referring to begins with "impact craters caused by meteorites.."
So, to reiteratet: If we assume that the geologically stable regions aren't any more likely to be hit with meteorites than are the geologically unstable regions, then the explanation for why we find more impact craters in the geologically unstable regions must be because the geologically unstable regions have lower rates of destructive processes, so the impact craters are being left alone in those regions, in contrast with the geologically stable regions that have higher rates of destructive processes that then mess with the impact craters.
That's why (D) is correct, because it tells us that the geologically stable regions aren't any more likely to be hit with meteorites than are the geologically unstable regions.
Answer choice A doesn't really do anything. So what if a new meteorite erases evidence of old ones, still doesn't explain why there are more craters in more geologically stable areas.
B says that the rates of geological stability vary from time to time. Still doesn't make our conclusion valid.
C says the rate of meteorites striking Earth has increased recently. Still has nothing to do with why there are more craters in stable areas.
D says impacts have been scattered fairly evenly throughout the Earth's surface. Ah, if they were scattered evenly, and these craters were disrupted by geological processes, wouldn't that explain why there are more craters in geologically stable areas? I think this is it.
E says geologically stable regions have been studied more intensely than less stable regions. It doesn't really do much for our argument, who cares if that's the case? Still doesn't explain why there are more craters in geologically stable areas.
@fahim.rahman111 thank you for your explanation!