- Sat Jan 21, 2012 12:00 am
#75192
Complete Question Explanation
The correct answer choice is D.
From the stem we know this is a Parallel Flaw question. The correct answer choice will have an argument that contains both of the flaws in our stimulus.
So first, we need to identify the flaws in our stimulus. Luckily, the stimulus is quite short so we don't have to do much digging. The argument in the stimulus clearly is using some conditional reasoning. Whenever conditional reasoning is involved in a Flaw question, we always want to keep a close eye out for Mistaken Reversals/Negations.
Sure enough, the argument here makes a Mistaken Reversal. The first premise gives us the conditional that Intelligent Nearsighted. The second premise tells us that John is very nearsighted. The conclusion switches the order of the conditional, and proclaims that John's nearsightedness is sufficient to say that John is intelligent. So we know that the first Flaw here is that the argument confuses the sufficient and necessary conditions of the conditional in the premise (aka a Mistaken Reversal).
How about the second Flaw? Whenever the conclusion contains a "new" word or phrase (in other words, that word wasn't mentioned in the premises), that ought to catch our attention. Here, "genius" should pop out as it is a brand new word in our conclusion. Did the premises support the conclusion that "I am a genius"? No; even if there wasn't a Mistaken Reversal here, the premises would only definitively support the conclusion of "I am intelligent". So there is some kind of gap here between the "intelligent" in the premises and the "genius" in the conclusion. That gap is the second Flaw in our argument. How exactly should we characterize that gap? I think Nikki did so very nicely in her earlier response, so I am going to re-post what she wrote when she said that this is an issue of "Assumed correlation. Just because nearsightedness is necessary for intelligence does not mean that the two qualities correlate in the way the author assumes that they do. The argument provides no reason to suspect that a higher degree of intelligence correlates with a higher degree of nearsightedness, or vice versa. There is a clear error of an assumed correlation."
So we are looking for an answer choice whose conclusion 1) relies upon a Mistaken Reversal of a conditional in the premises, and 2) assumes correlation between degrees. With that, let's turn to the answer choices.
Answer Choice (A): The author of this answer choice appears pretty down on herself, but she should have a little more confidence in her intelligence! Why? Well, the conclusion of her conclusion actually correctly uses the contrapositive of the conditional in its premise. So her argument has not made a Mistaken Reversal, meaning that this choice is wrong because it does not have the 1st Flaw in common with our stimulus.
Answer Choice (B): The argument in this answer choice does have a conclusion that relies upon a Mistaken Reversal, so it has the 1st Flaw in common with our stimulus. However, the conclusion does not assume correlation between the degrees like the 2nd Flaw that we're looking for. (In fact, it's pretty tough to imagine how it would even do so. "This bird has a giant beak, so therefore it must be a super chicken?")
Answer Choice (C): This is likely the most tempting wrong answer choice, since the conclusion kind of relies upon a Mistaken Reversal of the conditional in the premise, and it does sort of assume correlation between degrees albeit in a very bizarre way. I think we can rule this one out primarily because the part in the conclusion about the size of the spider ("twice as big") isn't really anywhere in the premises, so it isn't just a clean Mistaken Reversal of the conditional in the premises. That and the assumption about degrees is very mathematical in (C) (exactly 2x), whereas in both the stimulus and (D) it's similarly vague.
Answer Choice (D): This is the correct answer. The premise lays out a conditional, and the conclusion relies upon a Mistaken Reversal of it. So (D) matches our first flaw. And it also assumes correlation between degrees - just because he is very happy, he must be very tall. So the argument in (D) uses both Flaws that our stimulus did.
Answer Choice (E): This argument in this answer choice is correctly reasoned; it contains neither of the Flaws from our stimulus.
The correct answer choice is D.
From the stem we know this is a Parallel Flaw question. The correct answer choice will have an argument that contains both of the flaws in our stimulus.
So first, we need to identify the flaws in our stimulus. Luckily, the stimulus is quite short so we don't have to do much digging. The argument in the stimulus clearly is using some conditional reasoning. Whenever conditional reasoning is involved in a Flaw question, we always want to keep a close eye out for Mistaken Reversals/Negations.
Sure enough, the argument here makes a Mistaken Reversal. The first premise gives us the conditional that Intelligent Nearsighted. The second premise tells us that John is very nearsighted. The conclusion switches the order of the conditional, and proclaims that John's nearsightedness is sufficient to say that John is intelligent. So we know that the first Flaw here is that the argument confuses the sufficient and necessary conditions of the conditional in the premise (aka a Mistaken Reversal).
How about the second Flaw? Whenever the conclusion contains a "new" word or phrase (in other words, that word wasn't mentioned in the premises), that ought to catch our attention. Here, "genius" should pop out as it is a brand new word in our conclusion. Did the premises support the conclusion that "I am a genius"? No; even if there wasn't a Mistaken Reversal here, the premises would only definitively support the conclusion of "I am intelligent". So there is some kind of gap here between the "intelligent" in the premises and the "genius" in the conclusion. That gap is the second Flaw in our argument. How exactly should we characterize that gap? I think Nikki did so very nicely in her earlier response, so I am going to re-post what she wrote when she said that this is an issue of "Assumed correlation. Just because nearsightedness is necessary for intelligence does not mean that the two qualities correlate in the way the author assumes that they do. The argument provides no reason to suspect that a higher degree of intelligence correlates with a higher degree of nearsightedness, or vice versa. There is a clear error of an assumed correlation."
So we are looking for an answer choice whose conclusion 1) relies upon a Mistaken Reversal of a conditional in the premises, and 2) assumes correlation between degrees. With that, let's turn to the answer choices.
Answer Choice (A): The author of this answer choice appears pretty down on herself, but she should have a little more confidence in her intelligence! Why? Well, the conclusion of her conclusion actually correctly uses the contrapositive of the conditional in its premise. So her argument has not made a Mistaken Reversal, meaning that this choice is wrong because it does not have the 1st Flaw in common with our stimulus.
Answer Choice (B): The argument in this answer choice does have a conclusion that relies upon a Mistaken Reversal, so it has the 1st Flaw in common with our stimulus. However, the conclusion does not assume correlation between the degrees like the 2nd Flaw that we're looking for. (In fact, it's pretty tough to imagine how it would even do so. "This bird has a giant beak, so therefore it must be a super chicken?")
Answer Choice (C): This is likely the most tempting wrong answer choice, since the conclusion kind of relies upon a Mistaken Reversal of the conditional in the premise, and it does sort of assume correlation between degrees albeit in a very bizarre way. I think we can rule this one out primarily because the part in the conclusion about the size of the spider ("twice as big") isn't really anywhere in the premises, so it isn't just a clean Mistaken Reversal of the conditional in the premises. That and the assumption about degrees is very mathematical in (C) (exactly 2x), whereas in both the stimulus and (D) it's similarly vague.
Answer Choice (D): This is the correct answer. The premise lays out a conditional, and the conclusion relies upon a Mistaken Reversal of it. So (D) matches our first flaw. And it also assumes correlation between degrees - just because he is very happy, he must be very tall. So the argument in (D) uses both Flaws that our stimulus did.
Answer Choice (E): This argument in this answer choice is correctly reasoned; it contains neither of the Flaws from our stimulus.