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Q7 - The population of a certain wildflower

by shirando21 Wed Jul 18, 2012 9:43 pm

Could anyone explain why C is correct please?
 
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Re: Q7 - The population of a certain wildflower

by timmydoeslsat Thu Jul 19, 2012 4:02 pm

We have a sufficient principle question stem.

And the question stem is so appropriate, is it not? We are told about this species of a flower that is heading for extinction. We are then told that this species could cross pollinate with a different species and create hybrids.

The author concludes that this should be done, as we would not have a total loss of the species at that point, we would at least have this hybrid seed that contains some elements of this species of flower in question.

The conclusion is not that unreasonable, but it is still an opinion. A should statement is not an opinion of fact. A should statement cannot be logically proven without a principle. We could just as easily conclude that we should not cross-pollinate because perhaps this hybrid of a flower will attract different animals that will destroy other flowers, or that the hybrid looks terrible.

This author is assuming that the outcome of having some sort of carry-over of the species is more desireable than letting the species go away entirely.

Answer choices:

A) Not applying in our situation. We are not preserving something to ward off a substitute.

B) Vigorous?

C) Love it. Change it than to lose it entirely.

D) Better to destroy one of two competitors than let one be lost entirely? Not our situation at all.

E) Better to protect one even if this act of protecting harms another one? Not our situation either.
 
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Re: Q7 - The population of a certain wildflower

by shirando21 Thu Jul 19, 2012 10:40 pm

ok. I thought "The daisy" refers to the domesticated daisy...
 
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Re: Q7 - The population of a certain wildflower

by timmydoeslsat Fri Jul 20, 2012 3:26 pm

It does. The conclusion of the argument is that the domesticated daisy should be mixed with the wildflower to produce hybrids.
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Re: Q7 - The population of a certain wildflower

by ManhattanPrepLSAT1 Fri Jul 20, 2012 4:03 pm

Nice explanation Timmy!
 
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Re: Q7 - The population of a certain wildflower

by shirando21 Fri Jul 20, 2012 4:27 pm

ok. So the argument is talking about the wildflower-daisy hybrids will replace the wildflower.
But the domesticated daisy still exist independently.

So if there's any negative effect, it is for the wildflower not the domesticated daisy. that's why we cannot choose E? or it is completed not negative?
 
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Re: Q7 - The population of a certain wildflower

by timmydoeslsat Fri Jul 20, 2012 4:42 pm

We have no evidence to suggest that the daisy could not continue to exist even with some being cross-pollinated with the wildflowers.

The daisy can continue to be existing as it is along with the hybrid of a wildflower-daisy.

The wildflower would not longer exist as it exists currently, however.