- Tue May 10, 2016 6:04 pm
#24367
Complete Question Explanation
Method of Reasoning. The correct answer choice is (A)
The stimulus concludes that there is a problem in understanding what people mean when they claim that they feel younger. People claim to feel 75% as old as they actually are, but the stimulus uses the example of a 48-year-old responding that he feels like he is 36 to suggest that a mathematically rigorous interpretation of his response would mean that the 48-year-old is technically claiming to feel like a child, even though that is clearly not his meaning.
There are many flaws in the critique of the reasoning. You should probably jump to the question to avoid spinning your wheels, and in this case you will observe that the question merely asks you to identify a method of reasoning in the stimulus, so you should just match the choices against the stimulus.
(A method of reasoning implies that any trick will do, whereas the method of reasoning implies that you need to actually focus on the main line of the argument.)
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice. The stimulus does project from responses collected at one time from widely differing individuals (the first two sentences), and the stimulus does project what one individual (the 48-year old) would have responded over the course of his life.
That actually describes a problem with the stimulus. The argument presumes that the wide age range of respondents means that the 48-year old would have responded similarly to other differently aged persons when 48-year old had been their age. That presumption is flawed, because it is highly likely that social expectations and trends fuel the responses at any given time, so the 48-year-old’s youth should not be compared to younger people at this time.
Answer choice (B): The argument merely criticizes the reply as difficult to understand. What the argument never does is propose a more reasonable answer. You should not assume that the argument is that people should claim to feel like children; the argument is merely that the claim is unclear in meaning. This choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (C): Actually, the reasoning in the argument and the argument’s choice of the specific counterexample is very poor, and this choice is wrong. Furthermore, simply asking many people a question and reporting their answers does not constitute any kind of generalization, let alone a sweeping generalization. However, projecting the responses at a specific time of a group consisting of different ages onto the responses at many different times of an individual at different ages does constitute a sort of flawed generalization, so it is the argument rather than the survey that commits a generalization error.
Answer choice (D): The argument does not derive a contradiction from a pair of statements. The argument merely projects the meaning of one possible interpretation of a response-- a single statement-- to suggest that the interpretation would not make sense.
Answer choice (E): The argument in no way implies that the questioners manipulated people into responding as they did; the argument focuses on the alleged difficulty of understanding the meaning of the response.
Method of Reasoning. The correct answer choice is (A)
The stimulus concludes that there is a problem in understanding what people mean when they claim that they feel younger. People claim to feel 75% as old as they actually are, but the stimulus uses the example of a 48-year-old responding that he feels like he is 36 to suggest that a mathematically rigorous interpretation of his response would mean that the 48-year-old is technically claiming to feel like a child, even though that is clearly not his meaning.
There are many flaws in the critique of the reasoning. You should probably jump to the question to avoid spinning your wheels, and in this case you will observe that the question merely asks you to identify a method of reasoning in the stimulus, so you should just match the choices against the stimulus.
(A method of reasoning implies that any trick will do, whereas the method of reasoning implies that you need to actually focus on the main line of the argument.)
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice. The stimulus does project from responses collected at one time from widely differing individuals (the first two sentences), and the stimulus does project what one individual (the 48-year old) would have responded over the course of his life.
That actually describes a problem with the stimulus. The argument presumes that the wide age range of respondents means that the 48-year old would have responded similarly to other differently aged persons when 48-year old had been their age. That presumption is flawed, because it is highly likely that social expectations and trends fuel the responses at any given time, so the 48-year-old’s youth should not be compared to younger people at this time.
Answer choice (B): The argument merely criticizes the reply as difficult to understand. What the argument never does is propose a more reasonable answer. You should not assume that the argument is that people should claim to feel like children; the argument is merely that the claim is unclear in meaning. This choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (C): Actually, the reasoning in the argument and the argument’s choice of the specific counterexample is very poor, and this choice is wrong. Furthermore, simply asking many people a question and reporting their answers does not constitute any kind of generalization, let alone a sweeping generalization. However, projecting the responses at a specific time of a group consisting of different ages onto the responses at many different times of an individual at different ages does constitute a sort of flawed generalization, so it is the argument rather than the survey that commits a generalization error.
Answer choice (D): The argument does not derive a contradiction from a pair of statements. The argument merely projects the meaning of one possible interpretation of a response-- a single statement-- to suggest that the interpretation would not make sense.
Answer choice (E): The argument in no way implies that the questioners manipulated people into responding as they did; the argument focuses on the alleged difficulty of understanding the meaning of the response.