smartmanav wrote:
In C
Case A
lets say total population of town was 1 million and .9 million of d town people were readers of d magazine, then it strengthens d argument.
Case B
lets say total population of town was 1 million and .1 million of d town people were readers of d magazine, then it weakens d argument.
Correct me if I am wrong.
Case A
lets say total population of town was 1 million and .9 million of d town people were readers of d magazine, then it strengthens d argument.
Case B
lets say total population of town was 1 million and .1 million of d town people were readers of d magazine, then it weakens d argument.
Correct me if I am wrong.
Yes! You are right. Logically, if your conclusion says that 70% of population would build a house in less than 2 years, the population should be sample and representative of the entire area/state. If the voters are exclusively those who read the magazine, it is quite possible that they are already reading the magazine because they wish to build a house soon.