A
Car thieves will tend to be less cautious if they are unaware that a car they have stolen contains a homing beacon.
B
Typically, the number of cars stolen in cities where the homing beacons are in use was below average before the device was used.
C
Before the invention of the homing beacon, automobile thieves who stole cars containing antitheft devices were rarely apprehended.
D
A large proportion of stolen cars are stolen from people who do not live in the cities where they are stolen.
E
In most cities the majority of car thefts are committed by a few very experienced car thieves.
A
The rate at which gifts are returned to retailers has been steadily increasing since the rate was first measured.
B
Gifts of cash and gift cards currently represent only about 14 percent of all gift giving.
C
People in the study would have been willing to pay more for gifts chosen for them by close friends and relatives than for gifts chosen for them by others.
D
People are unwilling to sell gifts chosen for them by others unless offered about one and a half times the gift’s actual price.
E
Most retailers require receipts before people can return gifts for refund or exchange.
One of the hardest yet most helpful practices during Blind Review is to create your own analogous arguments. Consider the following analogy which should demonstrate the issue of smuggling facts of the world which you believe into other people's minds.
Oranges contain vitamin C which is an essential vitamin. (This is a fact. You just read it so even if you didn't already believe it before, you certainly believe it now.)
Many people criticize oranges because they believe that the fruit has no health benefits. These same people believe that vitamin C has health benefits.
Here's the entire content of those people's beliefs:
b1 - Oranges have no health benefits.
b2 - Vitamin C has health benefits.
Can we say that these people hold contradictory beliefs about oranges? No, we cannot. Look again at b1 and b2. There is no contradiction. You're tempted to say yes because you know that oranges contain vitamin C and you think to yourself surely they must believe this too. This is the trap that (A) lays out.
But, what we can say for sure is that these people's b1 is just wrong. They're just wrong about oranges' health benefits. Because b1 contradicts a fact of the world. This is (C), the correct answer.