- Wed Mar 30, 2016 6:44 pm
#22664
Question #10: Flaw. The correct answer choice is (C)
The fact that this stimulus is preceded by “Television host” is a solid clue that not only is an argument on its way, but also that some form of reasoning error is likely to be present. Ditto for stimuli prefaced with such notoriously dubious origins as, “Advertisement,” “Administrator,” “Letter to the editor,” and perhaps most of all, “Politician.”
In this case, the TV host seems swayed to suspicion (indeed to near-conviction) by the mere fact that a prosecutor chose to bring charges against a defendant, despite numerous elements attesting to the defendant’s innocence: a strong alibi, considerable exculpatory (exonerating/absolving) evidence, and the jury’s acquittal.
The flaw then appears to be that the TV host is basing his or her opinion not on evidence, but solely on the reliability of the prosecutor’s judgment and motives. Categorically we call that an Appeal to Authority, where the actions or beliefs of someone in a position of presumed expertise are trusted implicitly regardless of, or even in spite of, the available evidence.
Answer choice (A): This is an excellent description of the flaw in the prior question’s stimulus, but it fails for question #10. Here there is plentiful evidence—an alibi and, explicitly, “exculpatory evidence”—so “lack of evidence” is wholly inaccurate.
Answer choice (B): describes what is known as a Circular Argument, where an author restates the thing he or she is trying to prove in order to support that very thing. “Team X is the best team...because Team X is better than everyone else.” It’s a restatement, pure and simple. Unfortunately for (B) there is no such restatement in this stimulus, so this answer can be quickly eliminated.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice. As anticipated, the correct answer outlines a perfect description of an Appeal to Authority flaw: undue reliance on an authority figure’s judgments (the prosecutor’s questionable judgment in this case).
Answer choice (D): The TV host does suggest that the defendant may not be “completely innocent” in the case, however no distinction is made about the nature of that partial guilt, legal or moral or otherwise.
Answer choice (E): Once again, we have an answer using actual words from the stimulus but in an intentionally misleading way. That is, the jury did reach an acquittal quickly, and the TV host is somewhat skeptical of the defendant’s innocence, but that skepticism is based not on the speed of acquittal but on the prosecutor’s actions.
The fact that this stimulus is preceded by “Television host” is a solid clue that not only is an argument on its way, but also that some form of reasoning error is likely to be present. Ditto for stimuli prefaced with such notoriously dubious origins as, “Advertisement,” “Administrator,” “Letter to the editor,” and perhaps most of all, “Politician.”
In this case, the TV host seems swayed to suspicion (indeed to near-conviction) by the mere fact that a prosecutor chose to bring charges against a defendant, despite numerous elements attesting to the defendant’s innocence: a strong alibi, considerable exculpatory (exonerating/absolving) evidence, and the jury’s acquittal.
The flaw then appears to be that the TV host is basing his or her opinion not on evidence, but solely on the reliability of the prosecutor’s judgment and motives. Categorically we call that an Appeal to Authority, where the actions or beliefs of someone in a position of presumed expertise are trusted implicitly regardless of, or even in spite of, the available evidence.
Answer choice (A): This is an excellent description of the flaw in the prior question’s stimulus, but it fails for question #10. Here there is plentiful evidence—an alibi and, explicitly, “exculpatory evidence”—so “lack of evidence” is wholly inaccurate.
Answer choice (B): describes what is known as a Circular Argument, where an author restates the thing he or she is trying to prove in order to support that very thing. “Team X is the best team...because Team X is better than everyone else.” It’s a restatement, pure and simple. Unfortunately for (B) there is no such restatement in this stimulus, so this answer can be quickly eliminated.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice. As anticipated, the correct answer outlines a perfect description of an Appeal to Authority flaw: undue reliance on an authority figure’s judgments (the prosecutor’s questionable judgment in this case).
Answer choice (D): The TV host does suggest that the defendant may not be “completely innocent” in the case, however no distinction is made about the nature of that partial guilt, legal or moral or otherwise.
Answer choice (E): Once again, we have an answer using actual words from the stimulus but in an intentionally misleading way. That is, the jury did reach an acquittal quickly, and the TV host is somewhat skeptical of the defendant’s innocence, but that skepticism is based not on the speed of acquittal but on the prosecutor’s actions.