- Fri Feb 09, 2024 6:42 am
#105246
Nimisha,
Answer choice (B) describes a Mistaken Reversal. Now, as you point out, we have conditional reasoning in this stimulus, but the flaw isn't Mistaken Reversal. In fact, the flaw isn't conditional at all. The conclusion is the necessary condition of the conditional. That already means the flaw can't be conditional - conditionals allow us to prove the necessary is true (when the argument adduces the sufficient condition as a premise) or that the sufficient condition is false (when the argument adduces the negation of the necessary condition as a premise). So if the conclusion is the necessary, that means there is a way for this argument to work conditionally. If it still has a mistake, it can't be a conditional error. Since that's what answer choice (B) says it is, that answer is incorrect.
Instead, focus on what you said: "The conclusion essentially is that the management must be open to new ideas but isn't it true that we cannot prove this? Unless we are assuming the sufficient condition of this is true?" Indeed, the conclusion could have been proven if the sufficient condition had been established. So what's the sufficient condition? "A company grows rapidly" is. We don't know that about Logichut. We DO know that about the industry. So the author has made the leap from "the industry is growing rapidly and has been" to "Logichut is growing rapidly and has been". If that leap were allowed, the conditional would WORK. So the error is in the leap only. The leap is a whole-to-part error, making answer choice (A) correct.
Robert Carroll