- Sat Jan 21, 2012 12:00 am
#36486
Complete Question Explanation
Parallel Flaw—#%. The correct answer choice is (E)
The author of this stimulus makes a very basic mistake with numbers and percentages: Based on the fact that the police in university towns issue the majority of tickets during the school year—far more than they do when students are out of town, the author concludes that university students must therefore receive the majority of citations that are issued:
The question that follows is a Parallel Flaw question, so the correct answer choice will reflect the same logical flaw as that found in the stimulus.
Answer choice (A): This choice provides that as the children represent a greater portion of the movie-going population, concession sales increase, concluding that children buy most of the snacks. This proportionality is not like the flaw in the stimulus, where the author concluded that students get most tickets, because more are issued when they are in town than when they have left town.
Answer choice (B): Since no information is provided about the type of plants, there is no way to know which one should be greener, but this is completely unlike the flaw found in the stimulus and should thus be eliminated from contention.
Answer choice (C): This choice simply says that we know they’re studious, because they study while at university. This is nothing like the numbers-and-percentages related flaw found in the stimulus, so it cannot be the right answer choice.
Answer choice (D): The presence of more varieties of fruit doesn’t necessarily mean that people are buying more fruit, but the flaw in this choice is different from the one in the reasoning of the stimulus.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice: The flawed reasoning in this case is as follows:
Parallel Flaw—#%. The correct answer choice is (E)
The author of this stimulus makes a very basic mistake with numbers and percentages: Based on the fact that the police in university towns issue the majority of tickets during the school year—far more than they do when students are out of town, the author concludes that university students must therefore receive the majority of citations that are issued:
- Premise: When the students are in town, university police issue far more tickets.
Conclusion: Therefore, students get most of the tickets.
The question that follows is a Parallel Flaw question, so the correct answer choice will reflect the same logical flaw as that found in the stimulus.
Answer choice (A): This choice provides that as the children represent a greater portion of the movie-going population, concession sales increase, concluding that children buy most of the snacks. This proportionality is not like the flaw in the stimulus, where the author concluded that students get most tickets, because more are issued when they are in town than when they have left town.
Answer choice (B): Since no information is provided about the type of plants, there is no way to know which one should be greener, but this is completely unlike the flaw found in the stimulus and should thus be eliminated from contention.
Answer choice (C): This choice simply says that we know they’re studious, because they study while at university. This is nothing like the numbers-and-percentages related flaw found in the stimulus, so it cannot be the right answer choice.
Answer choice (D): The presence of more varieties of fruit doesn’t necessarily mean that people are buying more fruit, but the flaw in this choice is different from the one in the reasoning of the stimulus.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice: The flawed reasoning in this case is as follows:
- Premise: When other peoples’ kids are around, parents give out more snacks than they normally do.
Conclusion: Therefore other peoples’ kids get most of those snacks.