- Mon May 02, 2016 10:52 am
#23734
Complete Question Explanation
Flaw in the Reasoning. The correct answer choice is (A)
The stimulus observes that over the past 20 years hospital fatalities due to anesthesia decreased through improved training and not through the introduction of safety equipment, and concludes that now that safety equipment actually exists, it will not help cut fatalities.
The argument seems to assume that simply because training caused the improvement without any help from equipment, equipment cannot also help. Abstractly, the argument seems to assume that a sufficient cause is an only cause, and that is what you should remember when you are looking over the choices.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice. The argument assumes that because Training led to Improvement, Equipment will not lead to Improvement.
Answer choice (B): This choice describes circular reasoning, but you should not select a circular reasoning response when the conclusion proceeds from interpreting evidence, no matter how unconvincing the interpretation. While it is possible that an argument that uses circular reasoning will involve evidence, it must always be clear that the argument begins from a stated principle rather than the evidence, and simply restates the principle as a conclusion.
Answer choice (C): This choice may have seemed attractive, but it renders an actual flaw poorly. An actual flaw is that the argument assumes that the absence of a factor when a result occurred is evidence that the factor will not lead to the result, but this choice erroneously claims that the argument assumes that the absence of Equipment is what Improvement depended on.
Answer choice (D): This choice discusses an internal contradiction, but the stimulus had no such contradiction.
Answer choice (E): This response does not hit on the argument's attempt to eliminate Equipment as a possible cause of Improvement, and focuses unnecessarily on whether Training was actually a cause of Improvement. You should not select a flaw response that does not concern the main line of reasoning.
Flaw in the Reasoning. The correct answer choice is (A)
The stimulus observes that over the past 20 years hospital fatalities due to anesthesia decreased through improved training and not through the introduction of safety equipment, and concludes that now that safety equipment actually exists, it will not help cut fatalities.
The argument seems to assume that simply because training caused the improvement without any help from equipment, equipment cannot also help. Abstractly, the argument seems to assume that a sufficient cause is an only cause, and that is what you should remember when you are looking over the choices.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice. The argument assumes that because Training led to Improvement, Equipment will not lead to Improvement.
Answer choice (B): This choice describes circular reasoning, but you should not select a circular reasoning response when the conclusion proceeds from interpreting evidence, no matter how unconvincing the interpretation. While it is possible that an argument that uses circular reasoning will involve evidence, it must always be clear that the argument begins from a stated principle rather than the evidence, and simply restates the principle as a conclusion.
Answer choice (C): This choice may have seemed attractive, but it renders an actual flaw poorly. An actual flaw is that the argument assumes that the absence of a factor when a result occurred is evidence that the factor will not lead to the result, but this choice erroneously claims that the argument assumes that the absence of Equipment is what Improvement depended on.
Answer choice (D): This choice discusses an internal contradiction, but the stimulus had no such contradiction.
Answer choice (E): This response does not hit on the argument's attempt to eliminate Equipment as a possible cause of Improvement, and focuses unnecessarily on whether Training was actually a cause of Improvement. You should not select a flaw response that does not concern the main line of reasoning.