- Thu Sep 24, 2015 11:00 pm
#35045
Complete Question Explanation
Flaw in the Reasoning—CE. The correct answer choice is (A)
Your task in this Flaw question is to select the answer choice that best describes the flawed method
of argumentation in the stimulus. The argument proceeds:
Premise: the proportion of fat calories in the diets of people who read the nutrition
labels on food products is significantly lower than it is in the diets of people
who do not read nutrition labels
Conclusion: thus, reading nutrition labels on food products promotes healthful dietary
behavior
The causal conclusion in this stimulus, that reading the labels promotes healthful dietary behavior, is
supported by just one premise, an inverse correlation between reading the labels and the proportion
of fat calories in a person’s diet. The LSAT often provides poor causal arguments, and this is no
exception. Your prephrase for the correct answer is that the author has inferred from the existence
of this inverse correlation that a causal relationship must exist between the two, and in a specific
direction.
The incorrect answers will not properly describe the flawed method of reasoning in the stimulus.
Instead, these answers will describe something that did not occur in the stimulus, or they may
describe something that occurred in the stimulus but was not a logical flaw.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice. While the adverb “illicitly” may seem a bit
dramatic, this choice is correct because it accurately describes the flaw of inferring causation from a
mere correlation.
Answer choice (B): The conclusion did not make an unsupported generalization regarding a group.
Answer choice (C): This choice describes a flaw in conditional reasoning, which was not present in
the stimulus.
Answer choice (D): This describes a false dilemma, which did not appear in the stimulus.
Answer choice (E): This choice describes flawed causal reasoning, but the not specific flaw that
occurred in the stimulus. In this choice, the flaw would be to infer from observing some state of
affairs what caused that state of affairs to occur, without the proper context to reach that conclusion.
Flaw in the Reasoning—CE. The correct answer choice is (A)
Your task in this Flaw question is to select the answer choice that best describes the flawed method
of argumentation in the stimulus. The argument proceeds:
Premise: the proportion of fat calories in the diets of people who read the nutrition
labels on food products is significantly lower than it is in the diets of people
who do not read nutrition labels
Conclusion: thus, reading nutrition labels on food products promotes healthful dietary
behavior
The causal conclusion in this stimulus, that reading the labels promotes healthful dietary behavior, is
supported by just one premise, an inverse correlation between reading the labels and the proportion
of fat calories in a person’s diet. The LSAT often provides poor causal arguments, and this is no
exception. Your prephrase for the correct answer is that the author has inferred from the existence
of this inverse correlation that a causal relationship must exist between the two, and in a specific
direction.
The incorrect answers will not properly describe the flawed method of reasoning in the stimulus.
Instead, these answers will describe something that did not occur in the stimulus, or they may
describe something that occurred in the stimulus but was not a logical flaw.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice. While the adverb “illicitly” may seem a bit
dramatic, this choice is correct because it accurately describes the flaw of inferring causation from a
mere correlation.
Answer choice (B): The conclusion did not make an unsupported generalization regarding a group.
Answer choice (C): This choice describes a flaw in conditional reasoning, which was not present in
the stimulus.
Answer choice (D): This describes a false dilemma, which did not appear in the stimulus.
Answer choice (E): This choice describes flawed causal reasoning, but the not specific flaw that
occurred in the stimulus. In this choice, the flaw would be to infer from observing some state of
affairs what caused that state of affairs to occur, without the proper context to reach that conclusion.