- Mon Jul 29, 2019 5:37 pm
#66913
Hi Snowy,
You (and Leela) make a good point: answer choice (E) does not establish that improving well-being can be equated to a wise use of resources.
However, when weakening the professor's argument, we do not need to go that far. As the previous posters have stated, answer choices (A) through (D) do not weaken the professor's argument. Answer choice (E), however, introduces a new variable beyond just the expected net return of lottery tickets and insurance: that losing has a greater negative impact than winning's positive impact (apologies: I am paraphrasing for simplicity). It is akin to saying the rules that apply to assessing the wisdom of spending on a windfall do not apply identically to assessing the wisdom of spending to protect against loss.
Once we establish that the impact of losing is not the same as winning (sorry, still paraphrasing), then the economists' argument that lottery tickets are unwise but insurance policies are not could be a reasonable argument. As James Finch said earlier, the analogy between lottery tickets and insurance no longer holds.
Introducing the new variable via answer choice (E) weakens the professor's argument the most as answer choices (A) through (D) do not weaken the professor's argument at all.
You (and Leela) make a good point: answer choice (E) does not establish that improving well-being can be equated to a wise use of resources.
However, when weakening the professor's argument, we do not need to go that far. As the previous posters have stated, answer choices (A) through (D) do not weaken the professor's argument. Answer choice (E), however, introduces a new variable beyond just the expected net return of lottery tickets and insurance: that losing has a greater negative impact than winning's positive impact (apologies: I am paraphrasing for simplicity). It is akin to saying the rules that apply to assessing the wisdom of spending on a windfall do not apply identically to assessing the wisdom of spending to protect against loss.
Once we establish that the impact of losing is not the same as winning (sorry, still paraphrasing), then the economists' argument that lottery tickets are unwise but insurance policies are not could be a reasonable argument. As James Finch said earlier, the analogy between lottery tickets and insurance no longer holds.
Introducing the new variable via answer choice (E) weakens the professor's argument the most as answer choices (A) through (D) do not weaken the professor's argument at all.