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Quote:
(C) Whether buyers of Saber aspirin in ordinary bottles will be people who would otherwise have bought Saber aspirin in child-resistant bottles

The answer to the question presented by this choice affects the strength of the argument.

After all, if the answer is "yes," then the people who will buy Saber aspirin in ordinary bottles would have bought it child-resistant bottles anyway. In that case, Saber will not increase sales at all by selling aspirin in ordinary bottles.

On the other hand, if the answer is "no," then they would not otherwise have bought Saber aspirin. In other words, if Saber had not sold aspirin in ordinary bottles, at least some people who will buy it in ordinary bottles would not have bought it.

So, the answer to the question presented by this choice weakens or strengthens the argument.

Keep.
1) ­Adults who do not have young children often dislike buying medication in child-resistant bottles, and marketing surveys indicate that there is considerable demand for aspirin packaged in ordinary bottles, which do not have child-resistant tops

2) the Saber pharmaceutical company, which at present sells aspirin exclusively in bottles with child-resistant tops.

Based on 1) how can we say that they would buy (or prefer to buy it) it in child resistant bottles? Aren't we going against a premise with the wording of option C alone? I think C would have made sense if they compared Saber Aspirin with another brand of Aspirin instead. For instance, if some user bought child resistant meds from another pharmaceutical company (or from Saber) because some other factor (effectiveness) overrides packaging. So, overall sales wouldn't increase (or decrease) irrespective of the package in which the medicine was offered.
Quote:
(A) Whether making aspirin available in bottles that are not child-resistant will increase the likelihood that some children will ingest dangerous quantities of the aspirin.

While children ingesting dangerous quantities of aspirin would be unfortunate, we don't have a clear reason to believe that children's doing so would significantly affect Saber's aspirin sales. After all, if children were to ingest dangerous quantities of aspirin because of Saber's selling aspirin in ordinary bottles, Saber still might sell more aspirin than it would have if it didn't sell it in ordinary bottles.

So, the answer to the question presented by this choice has no effect on the strength of the argument.

Eliminate
I chose this option thinking that 1 incident of child injecting such quantities could result in a large number of users sticking to child-resistant bottles instead of switching to normal packaging bottles which would reduce sales from normal bottles. So, overall sales stays same or reduces which affects the plan/proposal.

Similarly if the incident didn't take place, users would continue buying medicines from both child resistant and normal packaging which would in turn boost overall sales for Saber.­
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MartyMurray
Quote:
(C) Whether buyers of Saber aspirin in ordinary bottles will be people who would otherwise have bought Saber aspirin in child-resistant bottles

The answer to the question presented by this choice affects the strength of the argument.

After all, if the answer is "yes," then the people who will buy Saber aspirin in ordinary bottles would have bought it child-resistant bottles anyway. In that case, Saber will not increase sales at all by selling aspirin in ordinary bottles.

On the other hand, if the answer is "no," then they would not otherwise have bought Saber aspirin. In other words, if Saber had not sold aspirin in ordinary bottles, at least some people who will buy it in ordinary bottles would not have bought it.

So, the answer to the question presented by this choice weakens or strengthens the argument.

Keep.
1) ­Adults who do not have young children often dislike buying medication in child-resistant bottles, and marketing surveys indicate that there is considerable demand for aspirin packaged in ordinary bottles, which do not have child-resistant tops

2) the Saber pharmaceutical company, which at present sells aspirin exclusively in bottles with child-resistant tops.

Based on 1) how can we say that they would buy (or prefer to buy it) it in child resistant bottles?
The point is that it's possible that, when Saber sold aspirin in child resistant bottles, people who would prefer to buy it in ordinary bottles, bought it in child resistant bottles just because that was the only way to buy it from Saber.

That point works in that, it's possible that, for some reason, some people just prefer Saber aspirin while some prefer other aspirin. So, it's possible that for whatever reason, people have been buying Saber aspirin in child resistant bottles even though they would prefer to buy it in ordinary bottles.
Quote:

Quote:
(A) Whether making aspirin available in bottles that are not child-resistant will increase the likelihood that some children will ingest dangerous quantities of the aspirin.

While children ingesting dangerous quantities of aspirin would be unfortunate, we don't have a clear reason to believe that children's doing so would significantly affect Saber's aspirin sales. After all, if children were to ingest dangerous quantities of aspirin because of Saber's selling aspirin in ordinary bottles, Saber still might sell more aspirin than it would have if it didn't sell it in ordinary bottles.

So, the answer to the question presented by this choice has no effect on the strength of the argument.

Eliminate
I chose this option thinking that 1 incident of child injecting such quantities could result in a large number of users sticking to child-resistant bottles instead of switching to normal packaging bottles which would reduce sales from normal bottles. So, overall sales stays same or reduces which affects the plan/proposal.
There's no reason why people switching back to buying aspirin in child resistant bottles would result in a reduction in overall sales. What makes sense is that, if people made that switch, the number of bottles sold would remain the same.
Quote:
Similarly if the incident didn't take place, users would continue buying medicines from both child resistant and normal packaging which would in turn boost overall sales for Saber.­
­It wouldn't boost sales. Sales would just be unaffected.

Also, even if an incident caused some people to start using child resistant bottles again. there could still be others who continue to use regular bottles, in which case, offering aspirin in regular bottles could still result in an increase in sales for Saber.­
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