People’s television-viewing habits could be monitored by having television sets, when on, send out low-level electromagnetic waves that are reflected back to the television sets. The reflected waves could then be analyzed to determine how many people are within the viewing area of the television sets. Critics fear adverse health effects of such a monitoring system, but a proponent responds, “The average dose of radiation is less than one chest x-ray. As they watch, viewers won’t feel a thing.”
Which of the following, if true, is the most direct criticism of the proponent’s response?To answer this unique Weaken question, we have to find the answer choice that states "the most direct criticism of the proponent's response."
So, a key move is to get a precise understanding of what that response is.
Reviewing the passage, we see the following:
a proponent responds, “The average dose of radiation is less than one chest x-ray. As they watch, viewers won’t feel a thing.”So, that's the proponent's response.
We can also see that the proponent is responding to the following:
Critics fear adverse health effects of such a monitoring systemSo, we can presume that the point of the proponent's response is that, since the dose of radiation is less than one chest x-ray and viewers won't feel a thing, there's no reason to fear adverse health effects of such a monitoring system.
Now, set up with that information, we can go to the answer choices.
A. The system cannot determine whether persons in the viewing area are paying attention to what is being broadcast.Since, as discussed above, the point of the proponent's response is to allay fears of adverse health effects, this choice, which is about attention, is not a criticism of the proponent's response.
Eliminate.
B. It is possible to gather reasonably useful data on who is watching programs by having selected families keep diaries of television watching.Since the point of the proponent's response is related to health effects and is not that the system would be necessary or uniquely useful, this is not a criticism of the proponent's response.
Eliminate.
C. Some of those who would watch television sets with the monitoring device on are already ill with conditions that keep them at home.Unlike most of the other answer choices, this one is fairly closely related to the proponent's response since this choice is related to health.
At the same time, this choice is not a direct criticism of the proponent's response. After all, even if this choice is true, the facts stated by the proponent could still mean that there's no reason to fear that the system would cause adverse health effects.
After all, the fact that someone is "already ill" does not mean that the system is harmful.
Eliminate.
D. Even recipients of large, harmful doses of radiation do not sense the radiation as it strikes the body.This is a direct criticism of the proponent's response.
After all, the proponent responds by implying that there's no reason to fear adverse health effects caused by the system by saying that "viewers won't feel a thing."
So, if it's true that even recipients of large, harmful doses of radiation do not sense the radiation as it strikes the body, then the proponent's response doesn't truly allay fears of adverse health effects. After all, in that case, the fact that viewers won't feel a thing doesn't mean that they won't experience adverse health effects.
Keep.
E. Because it would invade privacy, acceptance of the monitoring device would have to be voluntary on the part of viewing families, and that restriction would skew the results.While this choice presents an issue with the system, it's not a criticism of the proponent's response.
After all, the point of the proponent's response is related to adverse health effects and is not that the results produced by the device would accurately indicate what people's television-viewing habits are.
So, this choice is not directly related to the proponent's response.
Eliminate.
Correct answer: D