This is the quick solution I came up with:
Conc: Subscriptions to cable television are a bargain in comparison to "free" television.
(A) Consumers who do not own television sets are less likely to be influenced in their purchasing decisions by television advertising than are consumers who own television sets. - The argument tries to differentiate between those who have subscriptions and those who don't and not between those who have television sets or not. As long as they've the television sets, both free and paid customers will likely be influenced by the ads they see. The option doesn't help with weakening the conclusion.Drop .
(B) Subscriptions to cable television include access to some public-television channels, which do not accept advertising. - This answers the question "Do all channels have advertisements?". The fact that some do and some don't doesn't change the fact that ads still affect customers regardless of paid or free, but to what degree remains
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Conc: Subscriptions to cable television are a bargain in comparison to "free" television.
(A) Consumers who do not own television sets are less likely to be influenced in their purchasing decisions by television advertising than are consumers who own television sets. - The argument tries to differentiate between those who have subscriptions and those who don't and not between those who have television sets or not. As long as they've the television sets, both free and paid customers will likely be influenced by the ads they see. The option doesn't help with weakening the conclusion.Drop .
(B) Subscriptions to cable television include access to some public-television channels, which do not accept advertising. - This answers the question "Do all channels have advertisements?". The fact that some do and some don't doesn't change the fact that ads still affect customers regardless of paid or free, but to what degree remains
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Statistics : Posted by stackskillz • on 18 Oct 2012, 23:13 • Replies 11 • Views 24273




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