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Re: John: In several months of going to the Apex Health Club [#permalink]
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A should be the answer. We are asked to choose the answer which does not weaken, that is, any answer which strengthens or does not weaken is correct answer.

John observed that most people at Apex Health Club uses aerobic exercises machines instead of weight-training equipment. And, hence, he concluded that people are more likely to burn fat instead of increasing muscle mass. And again he concluded that since people do not like to increase muscle mass they do not consume the Blown's product, which helps to gain muscle mass. so, the advertisement at outside the Health Club, which is aimed to attract the members of the Health Club, is of no use since members are not inclined to increase muscle mass.

Choice A tells us that most club members work in nearby buildings whose exercise rooms have higher qualities aerobic machines, and although they come to the Apex Club. But the members are coming to club in early morning hours and not in work hours. And since they do not like to gain muscle mass, the advertisement is ill-conceived.

Please provide another explanation as this has taken 5 minutes.
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Re: John: In several months of going to the Apex Health Club [#permalink]
A & B seem to be likely answers, I disregarded A because of the following reason

A. Most of Apex Health Club's members work in nearby buildings whose exercise rooms contain aerobic exercise machines of higher quality than those
at the club. Although Club members work in nearby buildings with better quality aerobic exercise machines but they still come to the club may be for aerobics or may be for mass training, this fact Weakens the argument as Blown's plan to advertise might still be a good idea

B. Most members of Apex Health Club are aware that weight training is generally ineffective for individuals who have not consumed a pre-training meal
3 to 4 hours beforehand, while fat-burning exercise is most effective after eight or more hours of fasting. This statement neither strengthens nor weakens the argument

IMO B seems like a better option as it neither weakens or strengthens the argument. Anyone cares to comment.
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Re: John: In several months of going to the Apex Health Club [#permalink]
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Subject: John: In several months of going to the Apex Health Club

mikemcgarry wrote:
rajatr wrote:
John: In several months of going to the Apex Health Club almost every day in the early-morning hours, I have seen almost no one using the weight-training equipment designed to help increase muscle mass. Almost everyone uses only aerobic exercise machines, which are designed to help people burn fat. The Blown company is best known for dietary supplement products aimed at people trying to gain muscle mass, so Blown's plan to advertise just outside of the entrance to Apex Health Club is ill-conceived.

Each of the following, if true, weakens John's argument EXCEPT
A. Most of Apex Health Club's members work in nearby buildings whose exercise rooms contain aerobic exercise machines of higher quality than those at the club.
B. Most members of Apex Health Club are aware that weight training is generally ineffective for individuals who have not consumed a pre-training meal 3 to 4 hours beforehand, while fat-burning exercise is most effective after eight or more hours of fasting.
C. Many members of Apex Health Club who do not train with weights share a household with people who are trying to increase muscle mass.
D. Customers of a nearby store that specializes in weight-training equipment must walk past the entrance of Apex Health Club to enter the store.
E. Blown has recently begun to produce fat-burning products aimed at aerobic exercisers.

Quote:
Hi Mike, I appreciate that option A strengthens the argument in most cases. But i am unable to understand how come option B weakens the argument. As per me option B has no effect. Can you kindly resolve my query. Waiting eagerly for your reply.
Regards, Fame

Fame,
I will simply focus on (B). I will say, this is a very well-written question --- not a surprise from MGMAT! --- and it's a very difficult question. I think it's reasonably clear that (C) & (D) & (E) are weakeners, and I think (B) is the answer choice that makes this a very challenging question. Without careful reading, it's hard to see why this is not irrelevant.

Notice, the prompt was careful to specify ---- "In several months of going to the Apex Health Club almost every day in the early-morning hours, I have seen ..."
The evidence in this argument is entirely based on John's observations --- there's no objective source of information other than what John saw. Furthermore, all these observations were made in the early morning hours, presumably before the work day begins. John is vastly generalizing from what he sees at only one specific time of day.

Now, let's consider what (B) says.
Most members of Apex Health Club are aware that weight training is generally ineffective for individuals who have not consumed a pre-training meal 3 to 4 hours beforehand, while fat-burning exercise is most effective after eight or more hours of fasting.
Suppose these biological facts are true, and suppose the Apex users are well-acquainted with them. If fat-burning aerobics work best after 8+ hours of fasting, when would be the ideal time of day for someone with typical hours to do this? Early in the morning, right after waking up --- presumably, the exerciser wouldn't have eaten since dinner the night before, so that's more than 8+ hr. In fact, for most people, that's the only 8+ hour gap between meals in their day. Therefore, all the aerobic folks would have to show up at the crack of dawn, when John sees them.
By contrast, the weightlifting muscle-mass folks need to exercise 3-4 hours after a pre-training meal. Well, no one has their pre-training meal at 3 am! These folks would probably show up at the gym to do muscle-mass work either in the late afternoon (3-4 hours after lunch) or at night (3-4 hours after an early dinner). They would never show up at the gym at the crack of dawn, and therefore John would never see them.
This weakens John's argument. John is essentially saying --- everybody does aerobics and nobody weight-lifts. Well, that's very much true of the early morning crowd, the only slice of the population he sees, but it's not certainly not true of the other time-slots in the day when John is not in attendance. There are plenty of weight-lifters, just at other times of day that John doesn't see.

Does all this make sense?

Mike :-)




hi Mike,
can you please explain what is wrong in option E.
as it is not mentioned in stimulus that 'the blown' only makes supplements only for mass gain ...(it is mentioned that they are best known).
may be they advertise their other products which are designed to help people burn fat.

Br//SuryaV
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Re: John: In several months of going to the Apex Health Club [#permalink]
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suryav wrote:
hi Mike,
can you please explain what is wrong in option E.
as it is not mentioned in stimulus that 'the blown' only makes supplements only for mass gain ...(it is mentioned that they are best known).
may be they advertise their other products which are designed to help people burn fat.

Br//SuryaV

Dear Suryav,
John sees people doing aerobic exercise at the gym to lose body fat. He says that Blown's advertisements at the gym are ill-conceived, but if (E) is true, if Blown recently started to make "fat-burning products aimed at aerobic exercisers", then all those people John already sees at the gym will start using it, and the ads are a good idea, despite what John says.
Does this make sense?
Mike :-)
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Re: John: In several months of going to the Apex Health Club [#permalink]
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mikemcgarry wrote:
Fame,
I will simply focus on (B). I will say, this is a very well-written question --- not a surprise from MGMAT! --- and it's a very difficult question. I think it's reasonably clear that (C) & (D) & (E) are weakeners, and I think (B) is the answer choice that makes this a very challenging question. Without careful reading, it's hard to see why this is not irrelevant.

Notice, the prompt was careful to specify ---- "In several months of going to the Apex Health Club almost every day in the early-morning hours, I have seen ..."
The evidence in this argument is entirely based on John's observations --- there's no objective source of information other than what John saw. Furthermore, all these observations were made in the early morning hours, presumably before the work day begins. John is vastly generalizing from what he sees at only one specific time of day.

Now, let's consider what (B) says.
Most members of Apex Health Club are aware that weight training is generally ineffective for individuals who have not consumed a pre-training meal 3 to 4 hours beforehand, while fat-burning exercise is most effective after eight or more hours of fasting.
Suppose these biological facts are true, and suppose the Apex users are well-acquainted with them. If fat-burning aerobics work best after 8+ hours of fasting, when would be the ideal time of day for someone with typical hours to do this? Early in the morning, right after waking up --- presumably, the exerciser wouldn't have eaten since dinner the night before, so that's more than 8+ hr. In fact, for most people, that's the only 8+ hour gap between meals in their day. Therefore, all the aerobic folks would have to show up at the crack of dawn, when John sees them.
By contrast, the weightlifting muscle-mass folks need to exercise 3-4 hours after a pre-training meal. Well, no one has their pre-training meal at 3 am! These folks would probably show up at the gym to do muscle-mass work either in the late afternoon (3-4 hours after lunch) or at night (3-4 hours after an early dinner). They would never show up at the gym at the crack of dawn, and therefore John would never see them.
This weakens John's argument. John is essentially saying --- everybody does aerobics and nobody weight-lifts. Well, that's very much true of the early morning crowd, the only slice of the population he sees, but it's not certainly not true of the other time-slots in the day when John is not in attendance. There are plenty of weight-lifters, just at other times of day that John doesn't see.

Does all this make sense?

Mike :-)


Mike,
I have a question.
From the stimuli we find that John sees "almost no one using the weight-training equipment" in the " early-morning hours".
From the OA we see that most of the club members have access to better "aerobic exercise machines ".
What I have infered from these two is:
Since, most members have access to better aerobic exercise machines , one would expect to see a lower proportion of Apex members using aerobic equipment (and a correspondingly higher proportion using some other type of equipment, including weight-training equipment).
[Just like the OE]

Now, John argues that " Blown's plan to advertise just outside of the entrance to Apex Health Club is ill-conceived".
However, from the OE are we not deriving that more people are expected to use weight-training equipment? And, doesn't this derivation exaclty weaken John's argument?
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Re: John: In several months of going to the Apex Health Club [#permalink]
A

The main difficulty of a "WEAKEN the ARGUMENT EXCEPT" question is the wording of this question. Most people immediately look for an answer that strengthens the argument even though a choice that neither weakens nor strengthens the argument would also be correct.

The second difficulty is determining the SUBJECT of the argument. The argument itself is clear, that the marketing in front of the gym is a bad idea. But what is the subject of the argument? That is not explicit. When you think about it, the subject of the argument is the potential buying behavior of people that see the advertising, Apex members and people in the neighborhood.

The argument - Blows marketing efforts in front of Apex are ineffective and a bad idea.

Choices C,D, and E clearly show that the advertising will, in some way reach the buyers they want. So it is actually a good idea and it weakens the argument.

Choice A - I think is correct. It doesn't weaken or strengthen the argument.

Choice B -once you remember the importance of the time component in the beginning (always easy to overlook)it becomes clear that it is unlikely that John would see much if any people doing weight training since it is ineffective at early morning ( unless they are like Rocky and wake up at 4 in the morning do train!). thus this explains that John's perspective is not comprehensive and that Blown's actions might not have been so ill conceived after all. Thus this also weakens Johns argument.

Sidenote: When choosing between the final two choices, always pick the one whose subject is more clearly the subject of the argument ( potential buying behavior of Blown's product by Apex members).


John: In several months of going to the Apex Health Club almost every day in the early-morning hours, I have seen almost no one using the weight-training equipment designed to help increase muscle mass. Almost everyone uses only aerobic exercise machines, which are designed to help people burn fat. The Blown company is best known for dietary supplement products aimed at people trying to gain muscle mass, so Blown's plan to advertise just outside of the entrance to Apex Health Club is ill-conceived.

Each of the following, if true, weakens John's argument EXCEPT

A. Most of Apex Health Club's members work in nearby buildings whose exercise rooms contain aerobic exercise machines of higher quality than those
at the club.

B. Most members of Apex Health Club are aware that weight training is generally ineffective for individuals who have not consumed a pre-training meal
3 to 4 hours beforehand, while fat-burning exercise is most effective after eight or more hours of fasting.

c. Many members of Apex Health Club who do not train with weights share a household with people who are trying to increase muscle mass.

d. Customers of a nearby store that specializes in weight-training equipment must walk past the entrance of Apex Health Club to enter the store.

e. Blown has recently begun to produce fat-burning products aimed at aerobic exercisers.

Originally posted by clearmountain on 20 Feb 2014, 09:08.
Last edited by clearmountain on 20 Feb 2014, 12:47, edited 3 times in total.
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Re: John: In several months of going to the Apex Health Club [#permalink]
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sgangs wrote:
Mike,
I have a question.
From the stimuli we find that John sees "almost no one using the weight-training equipment" in the " early-morning hours".
From the OA we see that most of the club members have access to better "aerobic exercise machines ".
What I have infered from these two is:
Since, most members have access to better aerobic exercise machines , one would expect to see a lower proportion of Apex members using aerobic equipment (and a correspondingly higher proportion using some other type of equipment, including weight-training equipment).
[Just like the OE]

Now, John argues that " Blown's plan to advertise just outside of the entrance to Apex Health Club is ill-conceived".
However, from the OE are we not deriving that more people are expected to use weight-training equipment? And, doesn't this derivation exaclty weaken John's argument?

Dear sgangs,
I'm happy to respond. :-)

My friend, you are having trouble with the difference between evidence and inference/argument. The prompt says: John sees lots of people using the aerobic machines. That's true. That's a factual observation. Most people use the aerobic machines at this gym. That's evidence. In GMAT CR, never question the evidence. We have to assume that the evidence is true, unless we are specifically given some reason to question it.

Now, OA says: "Most of Apex Health Club's members work in nearby buildings whose exercise rooms contain aerobic exercise machines of higher quality than those at the club." Admittedly, this is a little puzzling. If these folks have access to higher quality aerobic machines, why are they using the aerobic machines at the gym? We don't know the answer to that, and we could speculate, but it doesn't change the fact, the non-negotiable fact: John sees most of the people in the gym using the aerobic machines.

You see, you are assume that, because you can't make logical sense of a piece of evidence, it must be false. You can't do that on GMAT CR. You can't question the evidence. If somebody sees something, then we have to assume that this is true. It may be we don't have a good explanation for why they are seeing that, but if they are seeing it, we must accept it as 100% true.

Does this distinction make sense?
Mike :-)
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Re: John: In several months of going to the Apex Health Club [#permalink]
Option A is not weakening the argument at all.The premise of the argument Is that people come to burn fat and not build muscles at the AHC.
The conclusion is that Blown Co shouldn't advertise muscle-building dietary supplements.
Option A merely states that members have better aerobic exercise equipment in their office buildings than that available at the gym.This doesn't weaken the argument in any way.

Posted from my mobile device
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Re: John: In several months of going to the Apex Health Club [#permalink]
AKG1593 wrote:
Option A is not weakening the argument at all.The premise of the argument Is that people come to burn fat and not build muscles at the AHC.
The conclusion is that Blown Co shouldn't advertise muscle-building dietary supplements.
Option A merely states that members have better aerobic exercise equipment in their office buildings than that available at the gym.This doesn't weaken the argument in any way.

Posted from my mobile device


AKG1593, going a little further, cant we say that since they have better aerobic exercise equipments available, they do not come to the gym to use these equipments. Instead, they use some others (which might include muscle-buidling equipments). However, that would contradict the premise. Thus, we need to accept that the members have better access to aerobic equipments, ye tthey come to gym to use the same.

Point out if I'm wrong nah?
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Re: John: In several months of going to the Apex Health Club [#permalink]
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sgangs wrote:
AKG1593 wrote:
Option A is not weakening the argument at all.The premise of the argument Is that people come to burn fat and not build muscles at the AHC.
The conclusion is that Blown Co shouldn't advertise muscle-building dietary supplements.
Option A merely states that members have better aerobic exercise equipment in their office buildings than that available at the gym.This doesn't weaken the argument in any way.

Posted from my mobile device


AKG1593, going a little further, cant we say that since they have better aerobic exercise equipments available, they do not come to the gym to use these equipments. Instead, they use some others (which might include muscle-buidling equipments). However, that would contradict the premise. Thus, we need to accept that the members have better access to aerobic equipments, ye tthey come to gym to use the same.

Point out if I'm wrong nah?

Dear sgangs,
Precisely. That's what's so brilliant about this question. Choices (B) - (E) are valid weakeners. Choice (A) is not a weakener --- it's a paradox! It's something that, at least on the surface, doesn't make sense. We have absolutely no idea why these members would come to the gym to use the aerobic equipment there when they clearly have access to better aerobic equipment elsewhere. At least on the surface, it makes their behavior seem illogical. Nevertheless, illogical or not, that's what they're doing: the premise makes clear they come to the gym to use the aerobic equipment. Choice (A) leaves us with a lot of questions, but it doesn't attack the argument itself. That's what's so brilliant. A weakener is a very specific thing, and (A), while it creates confusion in other areas, does not fulfill the very specific role of a weakener. It may weaken our overall understanding of the situation, but it doesn't very specifically weaken the argument, and that is the very specific job of a GMAT CR weakener.

Does this make sense?
Mike :-)
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Re: John: In several months of going to the Apex Health Club [#permalink]
John: In several months of going to the Apex Health Club almost every day in the early-morning hours, I have seen almost no one using the weight-training equipment designed to help increase muscle mass. Almost everyone uses only aerobic exercise machines, which are designed to help people burn fat. The Blown company is best known for dietary supplement products aimed at people trying to gain muscle mass, so Blown's plan to advertise just outside of the entrance to Apex Health Club is ill-conceived.

Each of the following, if true, weakens John's argument EXCEPT---So should not weaken..great

A. Most of Apex Health Club's members work in nearby buildings whose exercise rooms contain aerobic exercise machines of higher quality than those at the club.
-What da f..!!!..Just move ahead
B. Most members of Apex Health Club are aware that weight training is generally ineffective for individuals who have not consumed a pre-training meal 3 to 4 hours beforehand, while fat-burning exercise is most effective after eight or more hours of fasting.
They are not avoiding weight because they are not intereseted but because they know it is ineffective right now and thus should focus on other better suited exercises..Weakens..Reject
C. Many members of Apex Health Club who do not train with weights share a household with people who are trying to increase muscle mass.
So they can influence the other potential customer...so again the hoarding is not a waste
D. Customers of a nearby store that specializes in weight-training equipment must walk past the entrance of Apex Health Club to enter the store.
Again the hoarding is not a waste investment
E. Blown has recently begun to produce fat-burning products aimed at aerobic exercisers.
So the potential customers are visiting the gym..so hoarding is useful now..weakens
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Re: John: In several months of going to the Apex Health Club [#permalink]
mikemcgarry wrote:
rajatr wrote:
John: In several months of going to the Apex Health Club almost every day in the early-morning hours, I have seen almost no one using the weight-training equipment designed to help increase muscle mass. Almost everyone uses only aerobic exercise machines, which are designed to help people burn fat. The Blown company is best known for dietary supplement products aimed at people trying to gain muscle mass, so Blown's plan to advertise just outside of the entrance to Apex Health Club is ill-conceived.

Each of the following, if true, weakens John's argument EXCEPT
A. Most of Apex Health Club's members work in nearby buildings whose exercise rooms contain aerobic exercise machines of higher quality than those at the club.
B. Most members of Apex Health Club are aware that weight training is generally ineffective for individuals who have not consumed a pre-training meal 3 to 4 hours beforehand, while fat-burning exercise is most effective after eight or more hours of fasting.
C. Many members of Apex Health Club who do not train with weights share a household with people who are trying to increase muscle mass.
D. Customers of a nearby store that specializes in weight-training equipment must walk past the entrance of Apex Health Club to enter the store.
E. Blown has recently begun to produce fat-burning products aimed at aerobic exercisers.

Quote:
Hi Mike, I appreciate that option A strengthens the argument in most cases. But i am unable to understand how come option B weakens the argument. As per me option B has no effect. Can you kindly resolve my query. Waiting eagerly for your reply.
Regards, Fame

Fame,
I will simply focus on (B). I will say, this is a very well-written question --- not a surprise from MGMAT! --- and it's a very difficult question. I think it's reasonably clear that (C) & (D) & (E) are weakeners, and I think (B) is the answer choice that makes this a very challenging question. Without careful reading, it's hard to see why this is not irrelevant.

Notice, the prompt was careful to specify ---- "In several months of going to the Apex Health Club almost every day in the early-morning hours, I have seen ..."
The evidence in this argument is entirely based on John's observations --- there's no objective source of information other than what John saw. Furthermore, all these observations were made in the early morning hours, presumably before the work day begins. John is vastly generalizing from what he sees at only one specific time of day.

Now, let's consider what (B) says.
Most members of Apex Health Club are aware that weight training is generally ineffective for individuals who have not consumed a pre-training meal 3 to 4 hours beforehand, while fat-burning exercise is most effective after eight or more hours of fasting.
Suppose these biological facts are true, and suppose the Apex users are well-acquainted with them. If fat-burning aerobics work best after 8+ hours of fasting, when would be the ideal time of day for someone with typical hours to do this? Early in the morning, right after waking up --- presumably, the exerciser wouldn't have eaten since dinner the night before, so that's more than 8+ hr. In fact, for most people, that's the only 8+ hour gap between meals in their day. Therefore, all the aerobic folks would have to show up at the crack of dawn, when John sees them.
By contrast, the weightlifting muscle-mass folks need to exercise 3-4 hours after a pre-training meal. Well, no one has their pre-training meal at 3 am! These folks would probably show up at the gym to do muscle-mass work either in the late afternoon (3-4 hours after lunch) or at night (3-4 hours after an early dinner). They would never show up at the gym at the crack of dawn, and therefore John would never see them.
This weakens John's argument. John is essentially saying --- everybody does aerobics and nobody weight-lifts. Well, that's very much true of the early morning crowd, the only slice of the population he sees, but it's not certainly not true of the other time-slots in the day when John is not in attendance. There are plenty of weight-lifters, just at other times of day that John doesn't see.

Does all this make sense?

Mike :-)


If not MBA, GMAT preparation will surely make me Hecule Poirot / Sherlock Holmes :D..

Mike I did not think on such a depth . Out of A and B I selected A by PoE as it was talking about something which was not at all making any relevance to the assumption. The reason I disregarded B was that nowhere it is mentioned that Blown will advertise only during morning hours ( normally advertising say by hoarding or boards is a full day job). If not anything B indicates about the timings when those desirous of increasing their mass can come.

Am I over simplifying ?
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Re: John: In several months of going to the Apex Health Club [#permalink]
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himanshujovi wrote:
If not MBA, GMAT preparation will surely make me Hecule Poirot / Sherlock Holmes :D..

Mike I did not think on such a depth . Out of A and B I selected A by PoE as it was talking about something which was not at all making any relevance to the assumption. The reason I disregarded B was that nowhere it is mentioned that Blown will advertise only during morning hours ( normally advertising say by hoarding or boards is a full day job). If not anything B indicates about the timings when those desirous of increasing their mass can come.

Am I over simplifying ?

Dear Himanshujovi,
I'm happy to respond. :-) In some sense, the very point of GMAT CR is to develop a Sherlock Holmes kind of mind. You can't successfully approach GMAT CR by skimming along the surface of things. You have to think about the deep contextual consequences of each statement.

Think about the situation. Blown does NOT advertise only in the morning. Presumably, they simply buy a billboard or sign or something, and that sign is visible to all who come to the gym, 24 hours a day. The crucial issue is: when do different people come to the gym? Choice (B) is subtle --- we have to think about it a little, but it reveals who comes to the gym when, and why John's perspective might be skewed on this issue.

John is going only in the mornings, so he only sees the folks who work out in the morning. If that's a biased sample, then his conclusion is called into question. Choice (B), by suggesting when different folks come to the gym, directly implies that John's sample is bias.

You absolutely have to think about contextual implications of the statements. GMAT CR is all about the real-life context of the situation presented in the prompt.

Does all this make sense?
Mike :-)
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Re: John: In several months of going to the Apex Health Club [#permalink]
Yes Mike it does but weirdness of CR is such that sometimes subtle contexts are outright rejected as out of scope/irrelevant whereas sometimes they are taken as the answer


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John: In several months of going to the Apex Health Club [#permalink]
In EXCEPT questions anything which doesn't make sense at all or which doesn't weaken or strengthen the argument could be the answer. So whenever you see EXCEPT be on alert for such answers as well. In many RCs EXCEPT questions as well has exploited this trick.
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Re: John: In several months of going to the Apex Health Club [#permalink]
I did not select A and my reasoning goes as follows:

If it is true that the people coming to Apex health club have access to better aerobic equipment elsewhere, there is a probability that the people focus more on weight building equipment(may be for people coming after morning hours). If this is the case, then it makes sense that Blown has displayed its advert outside the entrance of the club. Then, it weakens John's argument!
In weaken or strengthen questions, the question stem says "Each of the following, IF TRUE...., so we are allowed to bring new information and we can always look at the stimulus as a suspect!
Please tell me what am I missing. I was furious with myself when I got this one wrong!
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Re: John: In several months of going to the Apex Health Club [#permalink]
rajatr wrote:
John: In several months of going to the Apex Health Club almost every day in the early-morning hours, I have seen almost no one using the weight-training equipment designed to help increase muscle mass. Almost everyone uses only aerobic exercise machines, which are designed to help people burn fat. The Blown company is best known for dietary supplement products aimed at people trying to gain muscle mass, so Blown's plan to advertise just outside of the entrance to Apex Health Club is ill-conceived.

Each of the following, if true, weakens John's argument EXCEPT

A. Most of Apex Health Club's members work in nearby buildings whose exercise rooms contain aerobic exercise machines of higher quality than those at the club.

B. Most members of Apex Health Club are aware that weight training is generally ineffective for individuals who have not consumed a pre-training meal 3 to 4 hours beforehand, while fat-burning exercise is most effective after eight or more hours of fasting.

C. Many members of Apex Health Club who do not train with weights share a household with people who are trying to increase muscle mass.

D. Customers of a nearby store that specializes in weight-training equipment must walk past the entrance of Apex Health Club to enter the store.

E. Blown has recently begun to produce fat-burning products aimed at aerobic exercisers.


John: Max people Wt loss, Muscle gain few.
Conclusion: Don’t advertise.
Question stem: Find 4 options that weaken conclusion….that is…Adv continue.
POE:
1. People won’t come to club. Adv waste. Don’t continue adv. Correct answer choice.
2. Out of scope.
3. Adv continue. Same in 4 and 5.
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Re: John: In several months of going to the Apex Health Club [#permalink]
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