- Fri Jan 21, 2011 12:00 am
#23447
Complete Question Explanation
Flaw in the Reasoning-#%. The correct answer choice is (B)
The therapist begins this stimulus with reassurances about the random nature of the sample population discussed. About ¾ of the 60 types of psychological problems had cleared up within 50 weeks (almost one year!) of therapy, so the therapist concludes that "50 weekly behavioral therapy sessions are all that most people need." Rather than ¾ of the problem types clearing up, the therapist appears to be under the mistaken impression that exactly three fourths of the population have all of their problems diminish.
Answer choice (A): There is no such presumption reflected in the therapist's argument, so this answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. The author fails to consider the possibility that some problem afflicts most people—suppose, for example, that each person clears up ¾ of his or her problem types. For none of those people, then, would therapy have been a complete solution. This hypothetical illuminates the flaw present in the therapist's reasoning.
Answer choice (C): The argument explicitly states that only 60 were considered—this is not the same as assuming that those are the only problems that exist.
Answer choice (D): There is no need to address the possibility that some forms of therapy are unproven, so this answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (E): The therapist only provides that it was a "large, diverse sample," but presumes nothing about the number of problems among the sample group relative to that of the population as a whole.
Flaw in the Reasoning-#%. The correct answer choice is (B)
The therapist begins this stimulus with reassurances about the random nature of the sample population discussed. About ¾ of the 60 types of psychological problems had cleared up within 50 weeks (almost one year!) of therapy, so the therapist concludes that "50 weekly behavioral therapy sessions are all that most people need." Rather than ¾ of the problem types clearing up, the therapist appears to be under the mistaken impression that exactly three fourths of the population have all of their problems diminish.
Answer choice (A): There is no such presumption reflected in the therapist's argument, so this answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. The author fails to consider the possibility that some problem afflicts most people—suppose, for example, that each person clears up ¾ of his or her problem types. For none of those people, then, would therapy have been a complete solution. This hypothetical illuminates the flaw present in the therapist's reasoning.
Answer choice (C): The argument explicitly states that only 60 were considered—this is not the same as assuming that those are the only problems that exist.
Answer choice (D): There is no need to address the possibility that some forms of therapy are unproven, so this answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (E): The therapist only provides that it was a "large, diverse sample," but presumes nothing about the number of problems among the sample group relative to that of the population as a whole.