- Sun Jan 22, 2017 3:29 pm
#32246
For this question, as I was running out of time for the section, I was between answer choices B and D. Initially, I had selected D but then switched to answer choice B. I categorized this question type as: flaw in the reasoning. During my analysis of the stimulus I had determined that causal reasoning was present. With T= testosterone and E= estrogen I had quickly diagrammed:
T ^HD (promote heart disease)
E vHD (inhibit heart disease)
Hopefully so far so good. I then proceeded to the answer choices armed with the knowledge of the ways we deal with causality on this test. I think where I went wrong was I looked at answer choice D (after selecting it), looked at answer choice B (after having selected D) and said to myself "D provides that what is discussed in the stimulus is correlated, but (I had thought) there was no indication of a correlation in the stimulus" (there totally is: Age goes up, hormones adjust according to one's sex, fluctuation of hormones with the more heart disease, three things that are seemingly related). Whereas B seemed to provide one of the assumptions inherent in any argument involving causality on this exam. Going over the question and answer choices I think I now know why B is wrong and D correct but again want to confirm that my thinking is accurate. B is wrong because of that word "only" when the stimulus concluded that the hormones tend to inhibit heart disease? D is correct because it accurately summarizes the flaw present in the argument?
T ^HD (promote heart disease)
E vHD (inhibit heart disease)
Hopefully so far so good. I then proceeded to the answer choices armed with the knowledge of the ways we deal with causality on this test. I think where I went wrong was I looked at answer choice D (after selecting it), looked at answer choice B (after having selected D) and said to myself "D provides that what is discussed in the stimulus is correlated, but (I had thought) there was no indication of a correlation in the stimulus" (there totally is: Age goes up, hormones adjust according to one's sex, fluctuation of hormones with the more heart disease, three things that are seemingly related). Whereas B seemed to provide one of the assumptions inherent in any argument involving causality on this exam. Going over the question and answer choices I think I now know why B is wrong and D correct but again want to confirm that my thinking is accurate. B is wrong because of that word "only" when the stimulus concluded that the hormones tend to inhibit heart disease? D is correct because it accurately summarizes the flaw present in the argument?