- Wed Aug 20, 2014 11:00 pm
#26208
Complete Question Explanation
Flaw in the Reasoning. The correct answer choice is (A)
The author of this stimulus begins by stating a position of a group of citizens, and then using the “some people say…” rhetorical device, introducing the view of those citizens who oppose turning a railroad grade into a hiking trail. The issue raised by those citizens is that the people who use the trail will probably leave food wrappers and other trash there, littering the area. The author disagrees with the citizens’ premise, claiming that most of the people using the trail will be dedicated hikers, people who care about the environment. Based on this evidence, that the citizens are wrong when they say the trail users will litter the area, the author concludes that the trail should be developed.
This argument displays an error in the use of evidence. Even assuming that the author is correct that most of the people using the trail are dedicated hikers, and even assuming that the trail will not become littered, the author has only weakened the citizens’ argument that the trail should not be constructed. Weakening an argument is not the same as proving its conclusion to be false. However, by concluding that the trail should be developed, the author essentially says that since the citizens’ support is weak, their conclusion is false.
This is a Flaw question. The correct answer choice will describe the author’s misuse of evidence, treating weakening an argument as if it were the same thing as proving the conclusion to be false.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice, because it describes the author’s assumption that weakening an argument’s support is equivalent to proving that its conclusion is false.
Answer choice (B): This answer choice describes an Error of Composition, in which the characteristic of a member or part of a group is ascribed to the group as a whole, which did not occur in this argument.
Answer choice (C): Here, the answer choice refers to a Circular Argument, in which the evidence offered in support of the conclusion is merely a restatement of the conclusion. In this case, however, the premise and conclusion were distinct.
Answer choice (D): This answer choice indicates an Overgeneralization from a potentially atypical example, but the author’s conclusion was not about an attribute of a majority of users of the trail. The premise discussed an attribute of a majority of the trail’s users, but not the conclusion. For this answer choice to be correct, the conclusion would have needed to say something about the majority of trail users.
Answer choice (E): In this case, the answer choice describes a Source Argument. However, the author did not address the actions or motives of the citizens who oppose the trail, and so this was not a Source Argument.
Flaw in the Reasoning. The correct answer choice is (A)
The author of this stimulus begins by stating a position of a group of citizens, and then using the “some people say…” rhetorical device, introducing the view of those citizens who oppose turning a railroad grade into a hiking trail. The issue raised by those citizens is that the people who use the trail will probably leave food wrappers and other trash there, littering the area. The author disagrees with the citizens’ premise, claiming that most of the people using the trail will be dedicated hikers, people who care about the environment. Based on this evidence, that the citizens are wrong when they say the trail users will litter the area, the author concludes that the trail should be developed.
This argument displays an error in the use of evidence. Even assuming that the author is correct that most of the people using the trail are dedicated hikers, and even assuming that the trail will not become littered, the author has only weakened the citizens’ argument that the trail should not be constructed. Weakening an argument is not the same as proving its conclusion to be false. However, by concluding that the trail should be developed, the author essentially says that since the citizens’ support is weak, their conclusion is false.
This is a Flaw question. The correct answer choice will describe the author’s misuse of evidence, treating weakening an argument as if it were the same thing as proving the conclusion to be false.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice, because it describes the author’s assumption that weakening an argument’s support is equivalent to proving that its conclusion is false.
Answer choice (B): This answer choice describes an Error of Composition, in which the characteristic of a member or part of a group is ascribed to the group as a whole, which did not occur in this argument.
Answer choice (C): Here, the answer choice refers to a Circular Argument, in which the evidence offered in support of the conclusion is merely a restatement of the conclusion. In this case, however, the premise and conclusion were distinct.
Answer choice (D): This answer choice indicates an Overgeneralization from a potentially atypical example, but the author’s conclusion was not about an attribute of a majority of users of the trail. The premise discussed an attribute of a majority of the trail’s users, but not the conclusion. For this answer choice to be correct, the conclusion would have needed to say something about the majority of trail users.
Answer choice (E): In this case, the answer choice describes a Source Argument. However, the author did not address the actions or motives of the citizens who oppose the trail, and so this was not a Source Argument.