- Fri Jan 21, 2011 12:00 am
#36962
Complete Question Explanation
Flaw in the Reasoning. The correct answer choice is (D)
The advertisement presented here inappropriately presumes that, because each winner of the Economic
Merit Prize for the past 25 years has been covered by the Acme retirement plan, these winners believe
that the plan offers them an economically secure future. The author concludes that the Acme plan is
good for those with similar needs.
In moving from the initial premise about coverage to the intermediate conclusion about security, the
advertisement makes the unwarranted assumptions that the winners of the Economic Merit Prize had
some control over the choice of their retirement plans, and that this choice was based in large part on
their needs (and not, for example, on sponsorship).
Answer choice (A): The stimulus provides information on the retirement plans of the winners over the
past 25 years. Information about plans from longer than 25 years ago is most likely irrelevant, and to
ignore it is not a flaw.
Answer choice (B): The advertisement argues that the Acme retirement plan is a good plan, not that it
is the only good plan, so this choice seems to misinterpret the argument as presented and is incorrect.
When a stimulus concludes that something is a solution, it is not vulnerable to the criticism that there
exist other solutions.
Answer choice (C): Since the winners of the Economic Merit Prize are never said to believe that the
Acme plan is good for all those similar to themselves, those economists are not portrayed as endorsing
the argument’s main conclusion.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. If the winners of the Economic Merit Prize did
not select the Acme retirement plan themselves, the intermediate conclusion that they believe the plan is
good does not follow from the argument, and the argument falls apart. Who selected the plan was never
addressed, and this represents a flaw.
Answer choice (E): The argument in the stimulus makes no such assumption, so this choice is incorrect.
The advertisement was geared to those with “similar” needs, not those with “identical” needs.
Flaw in the Reasoning. The correct answer choice is (D)
The advertisement presented here inappropriately presumes that, because each winner of the Economic
Merit Prize for the past 25 years has been covered by the Acme retirement plan, these winners believe
that the plan offers them an economically secure future. The author concludes that the Acme plan is
good for those with similar needs.
In moving from the initial premise about coverage to the intermediate conclusion about security, the
advertisement makes the unwarranted assumptions that the winners of the Economic Merit Prize had
some control over the choice of their retirement plans, and that this choice was based in large part on
their needs (and not, for example, on sponsorship).
Answer choice (A): The stimulus provides information on the retirement plans of the winners over the
past 25 years. Information about plans from longer than 25 years ago is most likely irrelevant, and to
ignore it is not a flaw.
Answer choice (B): The advertisement argues that the Acme retirement plan is a good plan, not that it
is the only good plan, so this choice seems to misinterpret the argument as presented and is incorrect.
When a stimulus concludes that something is a solution, it is not vulnerable to the criticism that there
exist other solutions.
Answer choice (C): Since the winners of the Economic Merit Prize are never said to believe that the
Acme plan is good for all those similar to themselves, those economists are not portrayed as endorsing
the argument’s main conclusion.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. If the winners of the Economic Merit Prize did
not select the Acme retirement plan themselves, the intermediate conclusion that they believe the plan is
good does not follow from the argument, and the argument falls apart. Who selected the plan was never
addressed, and this represents a flaw.
Answer choice (E): The argument in the stimulus makes no such assumption, so this choice is incorrect.
The advertisement was geared to those with “similar” needs, not those with “identical” needs.