In the phenomenon known as blindsight, some people who have been diagnosed as completely blind through damage to their visual cortex retain the ability to make judgments and take actions that appear to require or demonstrate the use of sight, despite the fact that they consciously see nothing. Such an individual, if prompted, might catch a ball thrown to him, walk around obstacles without having been told obstacles are present, or guess with unusual accuracy whether an array of dots is moving or stationary. Individuals with blindsight are usually not surprised by these events and attribute them to coincidence.
Argument brings an ambiguity in that a person completely blind through visual cortex still has the ability to judge and act which would normally require use of sight as if they are able to see but they don’t. But these individuals refer their surprising actions as coincidence. How’s that possible? What if they can see a little but that is not possible since argument says they are blind and can’t see? What if what they say as coincidence is actually not one?
Which of the following questions indicates the most serious weakness in the explanation described above?
A. Why don't people who are blind since birth exhibit similar abilities through coincidence? – WRONG. Not concerned about people who are blind by birth.
B. Why are they not surprised by these events? – WRONG. This does raise valid question. We can keep it.
C. Why do such individuals tend refuse to accept the suggestion that the events are not coincidence? – WRONG. Similar to point B above this raises question. We can keep it.
D. If it feels like total blindness, but it is not functionally total blindness, is it still coincidence? – WRONG. Argument says its blindness so we can’t counter it by saying it is not functionally total blindness.
E. If it's coincidental, then why does it happen repeatedly? – CORRECT. Coincidence can’t repeat itself and if it can then these people are hiding something? We don’t know but this does raise eyebrows.
Options B and C are wrong since more assumptions are to be made to prove them correct.
IMO Answer (E).