73 LR One Question 24
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I was torn between B and D on this and ultimately went with D but I wasn't super confident about it. Here's my thinking; B ends up kinda reaffirming the facts at best, but at worst it just doesn't really solve the paradox since we don't know whether the same people who were sampled constitute the majority of those who live in the vicinity of the concert hall. Are these two good reasons for eliminating B? Also, B seems pretty circular anyway; would an answer choice like this ever be right on this type of question?

Your reasoning is sound!
I can imagine an answer like (B) working in some other context (you're told that most people with Disease X have itchy rashes, and even though only 2% of the population of Z has Disease X, experts say there isn't enough rash cream to help the population of City Z. One answer: Most of the people in City Z have itchy rashes).
These questions have such oddball answers that it's hard to make any prediction about wrong answers by type (although, as you may remember, we do have some predictions about function). The one thing the right answers have in common is that they'll really make sense of the paradox.