- Wed Mar 30, 2016 6:42 pm
#22658
Question #16: Flaw, SN. The correct answer choice is (A)
The theorist begins by telling us that to be capable of planned or intentional movement, an organism must be able to form a mental picture of its environment and send messages to its muscles to control movements.
This is conditional, as follows:
Capable planned locomotion Mental image environment AND Control muscle movements
Don’t worry if your abbreviations don’t match those above. Just be sure you (1) spotted the conditional reasoning, and (2) put the pieces in the right places.
The next sentence goes from this to state that such an organism must have a central nervous system (CNS).
We can connect that to the relationship in the first sentence:
Capable planned locomotion Mental image environment AND Control muscle movements CNS
From that we can draw our own inference that any organism capable of planned locomotion must have a central nervous system:
Capable planned locomotion CNS
The author attempts to do something similar, taking that chain and tying together the first and last pieces, Capable planned locomotion and CNS, respectively. The mistake the theorist makes is that the connection is a Mistaken Negation, where the lack of planned locomotion capacity is incorrectly thought to prove a lack of a CNS.
Here’s the theorist’s conclusion diagrammed:
Not Capable planned locomotion Not CNS
Can you see how that’s simply the diagram we showed above, but with both terms negated? Classic Mistaken Negation error, and classic conditional reasoning flaw. Let’s find an answer that describes it.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice. Sure enough, this answer gives a great description of a Mistaken Negation, stating that the author has confused a necessary condition (CNS) with a sufficient condition, meaning if you incorrectly reverse our inference diagram above to be CNS Capable planned locomotion, then the conclusion would be the contrapositive of that and correct. Of course, reversing that inference is an error and that’s why the conclusion here doesn’t work.
Note too that this could also describe a Mistaken Reversal, another common conditional flaw. That’s to be expected since Mistaken Negations and Mistaken Reversals are really the same error presented in two different ways (both treat sufficient conditions as necessary, and vice versa).
Answer choice (B): The stimulus does not take this for granted. In fact it never says these things at all—nowhere does the stimulus tells us that the central nervous system is how organisms send messages to their muscles, nor does it just assume that that’s sufficient for locomotion (it’s actually one half of what’s necessary for locomotion).
Answer choice (C): Like (B), nowhere in the theorist’s argument is it suggested that planned locomotion is the only biologically useful reason for an organism to form a mental image of its surroundings. This answer can be ruled out by simply cross-referencing the facts in the stimulus.
Answer choice (D): This is the third straight answer that presents something that never occurred in the argument at hand. The theorist never implies that biologically useful adaptations (a concept entirely unmentioned here) had to originally be for that purpose. Once again, we can dismiss this on fact alone.
Answer choice (E): Somewhat surprisingly, albeit in a good way, we have a fourth description of the stimulus that fails on facts. The theorist at no point discusses any connection between forming an internal representation of an organism’s environment and that creature possessing “a rudimentary nervous system” (a phrase not used in this argument). All that is discussed is a central nervous system, however rudimentary or advanced.
The theorist begins by telling us that to be capable of planned or intentional movement, an organism must be able to form a mental picture of its environment and send messages to its muscles to control movements.
This is conditional, as follows:
Capable planned locomotion Mental image environment AND Control muscle movements
Don’t worry if your abbreviations don’t match those above. Just be sure you (1) spotted the conditional reasoning, and (2) put the pieces in the right places.
The next sentence goes from this to state that such an organism must have a central nervous system (CNS).
We can connect that to the relationship in the first sentence:
Capable planned locomotion Mental image environment AND Control muscle movements CNS
From that we can draw our own inference that any organism capable of planned locomotion must have a central nervous system:
Capable planned locomotion CNS
The author attempts to do something similar, taking that chain and tying together the first and last pieces, Capable planned locomotion and CNS, respectively. The mistake the theorist makes is that the connection is a Mistaken Negation, where the lack of planned locomotion capacity is incorrectly thought to prove a lack of a CNS.
Here’s the theorist’s conclusion diagrammed:
Not Capable planned locomotion Not CNS
Can you see how that’s simply the diagram we showed above, but with both terms negated? Classic Mistaken Negation error, and classic conditional reasoning flaw. Let’s find an answer that describes it.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice. Sure enough, this answer gives a great description of a Mistaken Negation, stating that the author has confused a necessary condition (CNS) with a sufficient condition, meaning if you incorrectly reverse our inference diagram above to be CNS Capable planned locomotion, then the conclusion would be the contrapositive of that and correct. Of course, reversing that inference is an error and that’s why the conclusion here doesn’t work.
Note too that this could also describe a Mistaken Reversal, another common conditional flaw. That’s to be expected since Mistaken Negations and Mistaken Reversals are really the same error presented in two different ways (both treat sufficient conditions as necessary, and vice versa).
Answer choice (B): The stimulus does not take this for granted. In fact it never says these things at all—nowhere does the stimulus tells us that the central nervous system is how organisms send messages to their muscles, nor does it just assume that that’s sufficient for locomotion (it’s actually one half of what’s necessary for locomotion).
Answer choice (C): Like (B), nowhere in the theorist’s argument is it suggested that planned locomotion is the only biologically useful reason for an organism to form a mental image of its surroundings. This answer can be ruled out by simply cross-referencing the facts in the stimulus.
Answer choice (D): This is the third straight answer that presents something that never occurred in the argument at hand. The theorist never implies that biologically useful adaptations (a concept entirely unmentioned here) had to originally be for that purpose. Once again, we can dismiss this on fact alone.
Answer choice (E): Somewhat surprisingly, albeit in a good way, we have a fourth description of the stimulus that fails on facts. The theorist at no point discusses any connection between forming an internal representation of an organism’s environment and that creature possessing “a rudimentary nervous system” (a phrase not used in this argument). All that is discussed is a central nervous system, however rudimentary or advanced.