Hi Skywalker
I understand how you might argue answer B to be irrelevant. But does this point not make the argument irrelevant and, thus, weaker? Weakest?
I would have happily gone in the direction of something to do with pollution control, etc, etc for my answer. But the subject of the Government statement is not about reduction of pollution, rather the reduction of dependence on imported oil.
I feel like the question, "which of the following... MOST seriously weakens the argument?" is subjective and if the subject of the government statement is dependence on imported oil, I feel like answer (B) makes the entire argument irrelevant is the most correct (my subjective experience) and all the other answers only weaken the argument.
Due to the fact that the government went from reduction of dependence to pollution reduction would suggest to the trained eye that either the statement maker is unreliable or lying, thus, not credible > irrelevant. Again, the subject of this argument is reduction of dependence on oil, not pollution control.
I also feel like answer E could be correct but your explanation ("Correct - if people tend to drive more now , then fuel consumption will increase ") does nothing to address reduction of independence on imported oil which is the subject of the argument.
And the books justification to the correct answer does little to shed light, "a government policy may have consequences that the government did not intent it to have." What consequences? And how does this justify that answer B is less correct than E? If the "consequences" are more driving (more dependence on imported oil), is this not weakening the argument?
Maybe I'm missing something.
Is E the correct answer because more driving creates more pollution and increases a dependency on imported oil?
I'd like to suss out what GMAC is looking for most in an answer.
Thanks in advance to anyone that can help.
Eric
In order to reduce dependence on imported oil, the government of Jalica has imposed minimum fuel-efficiency requirements on all new cars, beginning this year. The more fuel-efficient a car, the less pollution it produces per mile driven. As Jalicans replace their old cars with cars that meet the new requirements, annual pollution from car traffic is likely to decrease in Jalica.
Type - weaken
Boil it down - As Jalicans replace their old cars with cars with new fuel - efficiency standards, fuel consumption will decrease and thus annual pollution from car traffic will decrease
- The argument assumes the fuel consumption will not increase - either the people drive more now or the number of people who drive cars increase substantially
A. In Jalica, domestically produced oil is more expensive than imported oil. - Irrelevant - we are not concerned about the costs
B. The Jalican government did not intend the new fuel-efiiciency requirement to be a pollution- reduction measure. - Irrelevant - although pollution reduction was not a goal, it happened to be a by-product of new fuel efficiency requirement
C. Some pollution-control devices mandated in Jalica make cars less fuel-efiicient than they would be without those devices. - The argument does not discuss pollution control devices
D. The new regulation requires no change in the chemical formulation of fimel for cars in Jalica. - Irrelevant
E. Jalicans who get cars that are more fuel-eflicient tend to do more driving than before. - Correct - if people tend to drive more now , then fuel consumption will increase
Answer E