In all mammals, during their childhood years in ... A: This seems supported. Young mammals are going to run away ... t know anything about non-mammals. The passage is just about ... mammals. This is the correct answer ...
... The first line states "Mammals cannot digest cellulose and therefore ... A, which states that "mammals obtain no benificial health ... it (cellulose) strengthens their (mammals) teeth." This could be ... Maybe if it read that Mammals received no beneifical health ...
... since they taste bitter. Mammals also have livers that detoxify ... extreme: 1 million large mammals were found in contorted positions ... never even talks about "large mammals," and the comparison to ... this potential third group of mammals to the argument weakens ...
... it had a more substantial pelvis before)
3. Fossilized ... found fossilized skeleton)
- pelvis? Premise doesn't say it ...
Fossilized Whale
- had partial pelvis
- had fragile hind limbs ... whale had a full pelvis would strengthen that by ...
Hi why is C wrong? Wouldnt commercial development lead to more humans which lead to more mammals which eat the plants? I had a hard time distinguishing between C and D.
... talking in the frame of mammals - "all species that are similar ... in all relevant respects" = mammals, all of which, except for ... similar in all relevant respects (mammals, the hypothesis being the parasitic ...
Thank you! That's very helpful to help me memorize them! I'd still like to understand how I'm mis-diagramming the Misc. group of logical indicators with that second question with the mammals/cats example, so if anyone has any insight I'd love to hear it!
That's precisely why the answer is B! We are looking for the choice that is LEAST supported, and because non-mammals are never mentioned, answer choice B is the least supported by default. We know nothing about nonmammals, so zero support.
... that its never been demomstrated mammals can reproduce w/o ... therefore concludes that this means mammals cannot engage in parthenogenesis. ... does not rule out that mammals can engage in parthenogenesis ... not be the case that mammals can engage in pathenogenesis ...