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MartyMurray

Why A is incorrect?

The argument mentions that, since the temperature never rose above freezing -> hence the glaciers cannot be melting and loss must be explained by sublimation or direct evaporation of the ice -> global warming is not the cause

Because temperature never rose above freezing, the argument concludes global warming is not the cause

But if we negate choice A i.e If temperatures near Mount Kilimanjaro’s glaciers often rose above freezing, global warming would not be the most likely explanation of the ice cover’s disappearance, then the relation between temperature never rising above freezing and concluding that global warming is the cause gets broken.
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MartyMurray

Why A is incorrect?

The argument mentions that, since the temperature never rose above freezing -> hence the glaciers cannot be melting and loss must be explained by sublimation or direct evaporation of the ice -> global warming is not the cause

Because temperature never rose above freezing, the argument concludes global warming is not the cause

But if we negate choice A i.e If temperatures near Mount Kilimanjaro’s glaciers often rose above freezing, global warming would not be the most likely explanation of the ice cover’s disappearance, then the relation between temperature never rising above freezing and concluding that global warming is the cause gets broken.
The conclusion is "this loss cannot be due to global warming." Simply put, the conclusion is that global warming is not the cause.

The support for the conclusion is that "Recent data shows that temperatures of the air surrounding the mountain’s glaciers never rise above freezing, so the glaciers cannot be melting."

So, the reasoning is basically that, since the temperatures never rose above freezing, global warming is not the cause.


Now, it's true that, if we negate choice (A), the logic of the connection between temperatures not rising above freezing and the conclusion becomes less clear.

Nevertheless, the negation does not break the argument because the negation is essentially "Even if temperatures near Mount Kilimanjaro’s glaciers often rose above freezing, global warming would not be the most likely explanation of the ice cover’s disappearance."

So, with (A) negated, what we have is the idea that, either way, if temperatures did or did not rise above freezing, global warming is not the cause.

And that reasoning not really illogical.

After all, it could be that the fact that temperatures did not rise above freezing indicates that global warming is not the cause and that, also, even if temperatures did rise above freezing, global warming still isn't the most likely explanation for the ice cover’s disappearance.

So, (A) is not a necessary assumption.
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Could you please help to eliminate A.
I chose C because it's clearly an assumption, however had difficulty to eliminate A.
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KarishmaB
Could you please help to eliminate A.
I chose C because it's clearly an assumption, however had difficulty to eliminate A.


(A) If temperatures near Mount Kilimanjaro’s glaciers often rose above freezing, global warming would be the most likely explanation of the ice cover’s disappearance.

The argument talks about why 'global warming' is not the correct explanation - because temps don't rise above freezing so glaciers are not melting so global warming not responsible. The argument assumes that "temps rising above freezing" is required to consider global warming as the cause. It assumes nothing about what would make global warming the "most likely explanation."
From the argument, all we can say is that if temperatures often rose above freezing, global warming could be the explanation of the ice cover’s disappearance. Would it be still? We don't know. Would it be the most likely explanation? We don't know at all.

That is why (A) doesn't work.
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My thinking & please tell me where I am wrong:
­
Earth scientist: Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania has lost 90 percent of its ice cover over the past century. But this loss cannot be due to global warming. Recent data shows that temperatures of the air surrounding the mountain’s glaciers never rise above freezing, so the glaciers cannot be melting. The loss must be explained by sublimation, or direct evaporation of the ice, and by not enough snowfall to replenish it.

Which of the following is an assumption the earth scientist’s argument requires?

A. If temperatures near Mount Kilimanjaro’s glaciers often rose above freezing, global warming would be the most likely explanation of the ice cover’s disappearance - This is likely an inference or some extrapolation based on data. We will take premise on face of it.

B. Annual snowfall on Mount Kilimanjaro has declined by at least 90 percent over the past century. - Out of scope

C. The sublimation and lack of snowfall referred to cannot be due to global warming. - This sounds more like inference

D. It has not been clearly demonstrated that global warming has had any effect on Mount Kilimanjaro. - out of scope

E. Sublimation and a lack of snowfall could fully explain the loss of ice cover on at least some mountains other than Kilimanjaro. - This shows the cover is mutually exclusive & completely exhaustive

MartyMurray KarishmaB - Is my thinking in-correct?
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Bunuel
­Earth scientist: Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania has lost 90 percent of its ice cover over the past century. But this loss cannot be due to global warming. Recent data shows that temperatures of the air surrounding the mountain’s glaciers never rise above freezing, so the glaciers cannot be melting. The loss must be explained by sublimation, or direct evaporation of the ice, and by not enough snowfall to replenish it.

Which of the following is an assumption the earth scientist’s argument requires?

A. If temperatures near Mount Kilimanjaro’s glaciers often rose above freezing, global warming would be the most likely explanation of the ice cover’s disappearance.
B. Annual snowfall on Mount Kilimanjaro has declined by at least 90 percent over the past century.
C. The sublimation and lack of snowfall referred to cannot be due to global warming.
D. It has not been clearly demonstrated that global warming has had any effect on Mount Kilimanjaro.
E. Sublimation and a lack of snowfall could fully explain the loss of ice cover on at least some mountains other than Kilimanjaro.
The scientist says Kilimanjaro’s ice loss isn’t from global warming because the glaciers aren’t melting, they’re disappearing through sublimation and not enough snow. But for that to prove global warming isn’t involved, the scientist has to assume that sublimation and the lack of snow aren’t themselves caused by global warming. If global warming were making the air drier or changing snow patterns, it could still be the real cause. So the argument depends on assuming that sublimation and low snowfall aren’t due to global warming.

That’s exactly what option C says. Go with C!
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Goldenfuture
My thinking & please tell me where I am wrong:
­
Earth scientist: Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania has lost 90 percent of its ice cover over the past century. But this loss cannot be due to global warming. Recent data shows that temperatures of the air surrounding the mountain’s glaciers never rise above freezing, so the glaciers cannot be melting. The loss must be explained by sublimation, or direct evaporation of the ice, and by not enough snowfall to replenish it.

Which of the following is an assumption the earth scientist’s argument requires?

A. If temperatures near Mount Kilimanjaro’s glaciers often rose above freezing, global warming would be the most likely explanation of the ice cover’s disappearance - This is likely an inference or some extrapolation based on data. We will take premise on face of it.

B. Annual snowfall on Mount Kilimanjaro has declined by at least 90 percent over the past century. - Out of scope

C. The sublimation and lack of snowfall referred to cannot be due to global warming. - This sounds more like inference

D. It has not been clearly demonstrated that global warming has had any effect on Mount Kilimanjaro. - out of scope

E. Sublimation and a lack of snowfall could fully explain the loss of ice cover on at least some mountains other than Kilimanjaro. - This shows the cover is mutually exclusive & completely exhaustive

MartyMurray KarishmaB - Is my thinking in-correct?

Let me try if you don't mind.

The scientist's argument says:

1. No melting (temps below freezing).
2. Therefore, no global warming.
3. It must be sublimation and low snow instead.

The leap from 1 to 2 only works if sublimation and low snowfall are not themselves caused by global warming. If global warming is making the air drier (more sublimation) or reducing snowfall, then global warming could still be the root cause.

So the scientist must assume what option C says: sublimation and lack of snowfall aren’t due to global warming.

Your choice E says these factors could explain ice loss on other mountains. That doesn’t matter. The argument isn’t about other mountains; it’s about ruling out global warming for Kilimanjaro. E doesn’t fill the logical gap.
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