- Wed Nov 04, 2015 2:39 pm
#20476
Hi Sherry,
Thanks for your question. The student's response is a classic Straw Man argument: he attacks the teacher's argument by distorting and refashioning it. The teacher never said that journalists need not bother with sources, nor did she suggest that journalists can just invent stories out of thin air. Answer choice (B) gets the heart of this problem: perhaps the teacher would only approve of publishing unattributed statements if such statements were actually made? This answer choice brings up a possibility that, if true, would weaken the student's position, exposing it as a Straw Man argument.
So, you correctly identified the problem (Straw Man), and yet thought that answer choice (D) is attractive. Answer choice (D) neither states nor implies that the student mischaracterized the teacher's position. Just because the student takes the teacher's position to the extreme does not mean that he's judging that position by the most extreme case to which the position applies. Does the teacher's position really apply to inventing stories out of thin air? I don't think so. Twisting a position and taking a position to its logical extreme are very, very different concepts: the first one distorts the conclusion and amounts to a logical fallacy. The second one is not a fallacy - in fact, if taking a position to its logical extreme yields absurd consequences, the position you're attacking may indeed be problematic, in which case your line of attack would be justified.
Hope this clears things up!
Btw, you were asking about Question 17, not 18. I corrected your post title accordingly.
Thanks for your question. The student's response is a classic Straw Man argument: he attacks the teacher's argument by distorting and refashioning it. The teacher never said that journalists need not bother with sources, nor did she suggest that journalists can just invent stories out of thin air. Answer choice (B) gets the heart of this problem: perhaps the teacher would only approve of publishing unattributed statements if such statements were actually made? This answer choice brings up a possibility that, if true, would weaken the student's position, exposing it as a Straw Man argument.
So, you correctly identified the problem (Straw Man), and yet thought that answer choice (D) is attractive. Answer choice (D) neither states nor implies that the student mischaracterized the teacher's position. Just because the student takes the teacher's position to the extreme does not mean that he's judging that position by the most extreme case to which the position applies. Does the teacher's position really apply to inventing stories out of thin air? I don't think so. Twisting a position and taking a position to its logical extreme are very, very different concepts: the first one distorts the conclusion and amounts to a logical fallacy. The second one is not a fallacy - in fact, if taking a position to its logical extreme yields absurd consequences, the position you're attacking may indeed be problematic, in which case your line of attack would be justified.
Hope this clears things up!
Btw, you were asking about Question 17, not 18. I corrected your post title accordingly.
Nikki Siclunov
PowerScore Test Preparation
PowerScore Test Preparation