- Posts: 48
- Joined: Feb 19, 2021
- Sun Jun 06, 2021 11:22 pm
#87645
I was between C and D - on my PT I went with D and on my BR I wont with C - the reason why D is wrong is because it holistically does not drive at the "single unit more severe, therefore aggregate total must be more severe type of idea that the stimulus gets at.
Using Stephanie's greater preference for hot weather relative to Katherine as the premise for her hometown having more days of hot summer weather than Katherine's is definitely a flawed argument (there is no link between preference and reality stated, Stephanie could like hot summer weather more than Katherine because she gets less days of it and therefore cherishes it more, probably the more plausible reality if you had to speculate, but I digress). The issue is that the preference and number of days aren't logically linked in the same way that the nickels and pennies are. It uses summer weather as a vessel to attempt to get there, but it fails to accurately describe the "one is more severe, so all are more severe" flaw commits.
Theoretically, what answer D needs is the first sentence to say something like "The hottest day in Stephanie's hometown on record is hotter than that of Katherine's hometown." - therefore, there must be more days of hot weather there than in Katherine's town. This would get directly at the idea the stimulus discusses:
Aspartame (Stephanie's town) is sweeter per gram (has a hotter day on record) than Sugar (Katherine's town), therefore drinks with Aspartame (total days of hot weather in Stephanie's town) must be even sweeter (more than) than those with sugar (total days of hot weather in Katherine's town)
It's not perfect, but this I feel is more what they were looking for here.
Using Stephanie's greater preference for hot weather relative to Katherine as the premise for her hometown having more days of hot summer weather than Katherine's is definitely a flawed argument (there is no link between preference and reality stated, Stephanie could like hot summer weather more than Katherine because she gets less days of it and therefore cherishes it more, probably the more plausible reality if you had to speculate, but I digress). The issue is that the preference and number of days aren't logically linked in the same way that the nickels and pennies are. It uses summer weather as a vessel to attempt to get there, but it fails to accurately describe the "one is more severe, so all are more severe" flaw commits.
Theoretically, what answer D needs is the first sentence to say something like "The hottest day in Stephanie's hometown on record is hotter than that of Katherine's hometown." - therefore, there must be more days of hot weather there than in Katherine's town. This would get directly at the idea the stimulus discusses:
Aspartame (Stephanie's town) is sweeter per gram (has a hotter day on record) than Sugar (Katherine's town), therefore drinks with Aspartame (total days of hot weather in Stephanie's town) must be even sweeter (more than) than those with sugar (total days of hot weather in Katherine's town)
It's not perfect, but this I feel is more what they were looking for here.