Hey sam,
You mean S3, right?
We are told:
hotter the retina, the more molecular motion, the more error prone
From which we can indeed infer Animals with warmer retina are more error prone than animals with cooler retina.
Just thought I might share my thought process:
I immediately noted that they're giving us a percentage (% injured) of a percentage (%large car/small car drivers) of the 10,000. We know nothing about the second%.
For the sake of simplifying things,…
Hey JS,
When you are stuck between two answer choices, I encourage you to zero in on the details. C) sneakily says that EACH interpretation was tailored to the interest of a different cultural group. But we know that some of the interpretations were…
Hi K,
This isn't so neatly diagrammable, but I think the key here is to understand (as always) the gap in the argument.
The biologist generalizes from a particular instance:
1) Skeletons of lions & tigers are almost identical, but their hunting…
Hi JS,
You can eliminate because the style manual tells us that we can correct w/o explanation if it's an "obvious typographical error." An obvious typo is not the same thing as an archaic spelling.
Hi Divon,
You mean PT37, right?
I translated the stimulus like you did, but be careful with E).
The only thing we can logically conclude when food is bad is that we're not going to have a good meal
/Good food --> /good meal
E) is trying to get…
Hi Divon,
Let me take a crack at this one.
The "paradox" boils down to:
1. A seat belt law was passed that should have decreased TF
2. But in city X it didn't (it stayed the same)
These were a few immediate questions that I had:
1) But there are f…