- Fri Jan 21, 2011 12:00 am
#24080
Complete Question Explanation
Flaw in the Reasoning—CE. The correct answer choice is (D)
Here the psychiatrist shares some facts regarding phobias and traumatic events:
Phobias usually appear after a traumatic event. But not every time. And not everyone who gets traumatized develops a phobia.
From this limited information, the psychiatrist makes the bold (and unjustified) conclusion that traumatic events do not contribute to phobias. The flaw here is causal: the psychiatrist apparently believes that because trauma and phobias do not coincide in every single case, there must be no causal link between the two.
Answer choice (A): While this answer choice does describe a causal flaw, it is not the flaw manifest in the psychiatrist’s argument.
Answer choice (B): The psychiatrist does not assert that no cause can be established, but rather incorrectly asserts that there is no causal link between phobias and traumas.
Answer choice (C): This answer choice describes the flaw of circular reasoning; when we see a conclusion which is logically equivalent to a supporting premise, this is circular reasoning. But that flaw is not present in the psychiatrist’s argument.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. The psychiatrist presumes that in order for traumas to contribute to phobias, they must be associated in every instance.
Answer choice (E): The causal flaw described here is not present in the stimulus. The psychiatrist draws a flawed causal conclusion (that there is no causal link), but this conclusion is not derived from a “mere association.”
Flaw in the Reasoning—CE. The correct answer choice is (D)
Here the psychiatrist shares some facts regarding phobias and traumatic events:
Phobias usually appear after a traumatic event. But not every time. And not everyone who gets traumatized develops a phobia.
From this limited information, the psychiatrist makes the bold (and unjustified) conclusion that traumatic events do not contribute to phobias. The flaw here is causal: the psychiatrist apparently believes that because trauma and phobias do not coincide in every single case, there must be no causal link between the two.
Answer choice (A): While this answer choice does describe a causal flaw, it is not the flaw manifest in the psychiatrist’s argument.
Answer choice (B): The psychiatrist does not assert that no cause can be established, but rather incorrectly asserts that there is no causal link between phobias and traumas.
Answer choice (C): This answer choice describes the flaw of circular reasoning; when we see a conclusion which is logically equivalent to a supporting premise, this is circular reasoning. But that flaw is not present in the psychiatrist’s argument.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. The psychiatrist presumes that in order for traumas to contribute to phobias, they must be associated in every instance.
Answer choice (E): The causal flaw described here is not present in the stimulus. The psychiatrist draws a flawed causal conclusion (that there is no causal link), but this conclusion is not derived from a “mere association.”