- Tue Sep 21, 2021 4:01 pm
#90622
Complete Question Explanation
Flaw in the Reasoning. The correct answer choice is (B).
Ah, politics. The source of all joy in American life!
In this argument, the author is responding to a claim by Mr. Klemke. Klemke argues that the complaints recently lodged against his roofing company are baseless, on the grounds that his political views are widely known and each of the complainants disagrees with his views, therefore making them biased. But the author argues that perhaps Klemke actually did treat them badly because he disagreed with their views, so Klemke is incorrect that the complaints are unfounded.
This argument appears to have two flaws. Firstly, and perhaps surprisingly, is that the author doesn't seem to refute Klemke's reasoning at all. Merely, they provide an additional consideration and leave his premise without a direct response. Given how petulant many are when it comes to politics, it appears more than possible that the complainants were motivated by their feelings about Klemke's politics than his actual roofing skills. Secondly, they treat poor evidence as proof that a conclusion is false, but this a common fallacy tested on the LSAT. A conclusion can still be true, even if the evidence given for it is inadequate.
Answer choice (A): In other words, this answer choice claims that the argument treats the leaving of negative reviews as a cause of the complainants' bias, which the argument never does. Skip.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. Yes! The is one of the flaws we caught in our prephrase and the correct answer.
Answer choice (C): Be careful with shell game answers like this. It uses a lot of words we saw in the stimulus, but make sure to understand what the answer is actually saying. The author doesn't reject Klemke's argument because they feel Klemke was biased; they reject it because they found his reasoning to be weak.
Answer choice (D): The author never relied on a sample of opinions. Skip.
Answer choice (E): No, the author is definitely aware that Klemke and the complainants disagree on their political views.
Flaw in the Reasoning. The correct answer choice is (B).
Ah, politics. The source of all joy in American life!

In this argument, the author is responding to a claim by Mr. Klemke. Klemke argues that the complaints recently lodged against his roofing company are baseless, on the grounds that his political views are widely known and each of the complainants disagrees with his views, therefore making them biased. But the author argues that perhaps Klemke actually did treat them badly because he disagreed with their views, so Klemke is incorrect that the complaints are unfounded.
This argument appears to have two flaws. Firstly, and perhaps surprisingly, is that the author doesn't seem to refute Klemke's reasoning at all. Merely, they provide an additional consideration and leave his premise without a direct response. Given how petulant many are when it comes to politics, it appears more than possible that the complainants were motivated by their feelings about Klemke's politics than his actual roofing skills. Secondly, they treat poor evidence as proof that a conclusion is false, but this a common fallacy tested on the LSAT. A conclusion can still be true, even if the evidence given for it is inadequate.
Answer choice (A): In other words, this answer choice claims that the argument treats the leaving of negative reviews as a cause of the complainants' bias, which the argument never does. Skip.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. Yes! The is one of the flaws we caught in our prephrase and the correct answer.
Answer choice (C): Be careful with shell game answers like this. It uses a lot of words we saw in the stimulus, but make sure to understand what the answer is actually saying. The author doesn't reject Klemke's argument because they feel Klemke was biased; they reject it because they found his reasoning to be weak.
Answer choice (D): The author never relied on a sample of opinions. Skip.
Answer choice (E): No, the author is definitely aware that Klemke and the complainants disagree on their political views.