- Tue Jul 24, 2018 6:11 pm
#48775
There is a close relationship between Flaw and Assumption question, akanshalsat, in that pretty much every flaw can be described as a bad assumption. For example, in a source argument, where you attack the person who made the argument instead of the merits of the argument itself, you can see that as the author assuming that a "bad person" can't make a good argument. In a Time Shift flaw, the author improperly assumes that what happened in the past will happen in the future. So while we are looking for the flaw in the reasoning here, that is very much like looking for their unwarranted or questionable assumption.
Now let's take a look at answer C. Why is this not the flaw in the argument, the author's unwarranted assumption? Two reasons - first, he made no argument about actual driving speed, but only about speed limits. A fine point, but an important difference! Second, he made no argument about fewer accidents, only fewer fatalities! Maybe he didn't assume fewer accidents, only ones that are less severe?
Now think about answer E in terms of causal reasoning. The author is claiming that the lower speed limit caused the lower number of fatalities. To make that claim, he has to assume that there was no other cause for the lower number of fatalities this year. That means that, among other things, he assumed that the change wasn't due to a return to normal. Maybe the speed limit had nothing to do with it, and the change was due to last year being anomalous? That could have "caused" the change, instead of the speed limit reduction, right? Maybe instead of looking at what helped this year, we should be looking to find out what made last year so unusual? The author assumes that it wasn't unusually high, and that assumption may not be valid.
I hope that helps!
Adam M. Tyson
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