by ohthatpatrick Wed Jan 29, 2014 6:26 pm
Here's a complete explanation for posterity:
Flaw (Necessary Assumption)
Prem 1
1 out of 9 planets in our solar system can sustain life
Prem 2
There are TONS of planetary systems in the universe
Conc
There must be tons of planets fit to sustain life
The question stem says "argument is questionable", which tells us it's a Flaw question. But whenever an answer choice on Flaw questions begins with "takes for granted" or "presumes without providing justification", the answer choice is just offering us a Necessary Assumption.
So since this question is really asking, "Which of these answer choices does the author presume without providing justification?", it's really a Necessary Assumption question.
I bring that up because on Necessary Assumption questions, it's super helpful to be wary of extreme language. (You should have the same "red flag" when you're doing Flaw and an answer choice begins with 'takes for granted' or 'presumes').
(A) This is an extreme idea. ALL Earthlike planets will have life? Notice that the argument is only about "fit to sustain life", not about actually having life develop.
(B) This is something the author was assuming, insofar as the author wants to use OUR solar system's 1:9 ratio and apply it to other planetary systems. If we negate this answer, "our solar system is NOT similar to many others", it weakens the argument by making it inappropriate for the author to apply something he knows about OUR solar system to OTHER planetary systems.
(C) "Well understood" is a loaded phrase that is almost universally wrong on Necessary Assumption. When you negate "well understood", you get "NOT well understood", but that still leaves room for "pretty well understood", which is gonna be enough to make an argument. Plus, the author's argument has nothing to do with naming/explaining/understanding the conditions for life. As the previous poster mentioned, the author is merely observing that Earth is capable of sustaining life and applying a mathematical ratio to unknown planetary systems.
(D) This does not sound a lot like the author. The author's argument is based off thinking that other planetary systems would have our same ratio of life sustaining planets ... that life would be possible elsewhere for similar reasons / in similar proportions to how it's possible in our solar system. This answer is WEAKENING the analogy between our solar system and other planetary systems, so the author wouldn't be assuming something that weakens his central analogy.
(E) "Most" is a loaded term that is wrong 98% of the time you see it in Necessary Assumption. The author WAS indeed applying the 1:9 ratio to other planetary systems, but a ratio is a simplified fraction, not a raw number. Applying a ratio to other planetary systems would mean that if a system had 18 planets, than 2 of them would be life sustaining. If a system had 27 planets, than 3 of them would be life sustaining. The author only assumed the RATIO would be similar elsewhere, not that the ACTUAL NUMBER of planets would be the same.