- Wed Mar 30, 2016 6:14 pm
#22635
Question #18: Flaw—SN. The correct answer choice is (B).
This is a challenging question for one reason only: it requires close reading and very close attention to detail. The police captain’s argument is structured as follows:
Consider an analogous argument: Jane has never stolen a Corvette. Therefore, Jane is not a car thief. The police captain is guilty of the same logical fallacy, albeit one that is more difficult to catch.
Answer choice (A): This answer choice is attractive, but incorrect. The police captain does not rely on a limited sample of officers (for instance, he never said, “no officer I know of has ever taken such gifts”). His evidence is quite definitive: no officer in my (entire) precinct has ever done this. Not one. This is not a small sample.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. If there are other instances of graft besides those indicated by the chief of police, it is entirely possible that some of the officers in the captain’s precinct have been rightfully accused of graft.
Answer choice (C): In defending his officers, the captain’s makes no mention of their character or motivations. This answer choice describes an entirely different fallacy.
Answer choice (D): The captain’s argument does not extend to a rebuttal of any accusation of corruption.
Answer choice (E): This answer choice describes an internal contradiction, for which there is no evidence in this argument. This would be like saying, “I know one of my officers took a bribe, but he had no other choice—his house was being foreclosed, and he would have been homeless. Therefore, the recent accusations of graft are unfounded.”
This is a challenging question for one reason only: it requires close reading and very close attention to detail. The police captain’s argument is structured as follows:
Premise—Gifts of cash or objects valued at more than $100 count as graft.At first glance, this looks like a valid argument, as long as we assume that the police captain’s certainty is not misplaced. This being the LSAT, certain knowledge should be taken at face value—let’s assume that the captain’s premise is correct, and that no one in his precinct has ever taken such gifts. Does that establish that no one can be accused of graft? Not necessarily! Gifts of cash or objects valued at more than $100 simply count as graft: they are a type—an example—of graft. For all we know, graft is a much broader term that captures all sorts of political embezzlement, influence peddling, or other forms of political corruption.
Premise—No officer in my precinct has ever taken such gifts.
Conclusion—The accusations of graft in my precinct are unfounded (i.e. no one is guilty of graft).
Consider an analogous argument: Jane has never stolen a Corvette. Therefore, Jane is not a car thief. The police captain is guilty of the same logical fallacy, albeit one that is more difficult to catch.
Answer choice (A): This answer choice is attractive, but incorrect. The police captain does not rely on a limited sample of officers (for instance, he never said, “no officer I know of has ever taken such gifts”). His evidence is quite definitive: no officer in my (entire) precinct has ever done this. Not one. This is not a small sample.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. If there are other instances of graft besides those indicated by the chief of police, it is entirely possible that some of the officers in the captain’s precinct have been rightfully accused of graft.
Answer choice (C): In defending his officers, the captain’s makes no mention of their character or motivations. This answer choice describes an entirely different fallacy.
Answer choice (D): The captain’s argument does not extend to a rebuttal of any accusation of corruption.
Answer choice (E): This answer choice describes an internal contradiction, for which there is no evidence in this argument. This would be like saying, “I know one of my officers took a bribe, but he had no other choice—his house was being foreclosed, and he would have been homeless. Therefore, the recent accusations of graft are unfounded.”