- Fri Nov 21, 2014 12:00 am
#33752
Complete Question Explanation
Flaw in the Reasoning—CE. The correct answer choice is (B)
In this stimulus, the marketing consultant passes judgment on LRG’s advertising campaign. Apparently, the consultant had previously predicted that the campaign would be unpopular with customers, and would not effectively promote LRG’s new products. LRG did not accept the consultant’s advice and, based on the advice of another consultant, went ahead with the campaign. Now, LRG’s new products are selling very poorly and their sales figures are down for the season. Based on this, the original consultant concludes that “the advertising campaign was ill conceived.”
This is a causal argument. Essentially, the consultant has concluded that the advertising campaign caused the poor sales results:
The question stem identifies this as a Flaw in the Reasoning question. Our prephrase is that the marketing consultant assumes that the advertising campaign is the cause of LRG’s low sales figures, when there may be some alternate cause for those numbers.
Answer choice (A): This answer choice is inconsistent with the consultant’s argument. If the consultant were to assume that LRG’s sales would have been even lower without the advertising campaign, then the argument would be treating the campaign as a positive, rather than a negative, influence.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice because it correctly identifies the consultant’s flawed use of causal reasoning, assuming that the campaign is the cause of the poor sales figures, when some other cause may be at work. Here, the answer choice specifically points to the possibility that the alternate cause is a set of economic factors unrelated to the advertising campaign.
Answer choice (C): Here, the answer choice is incorrect because the consultant did not make any comparison between the sales performance of new and established products.
Answer choice (D): The consultant did not reach any conclusion about higher sales of established products, so the argument could not have assumed what caused higher sales of those products.
Answer choice (E): This answer choice describes a flaw in conditional reasoning. However, the consultant’s conclusion did not result from the use of conditional reasoning.
Flaw in the Reasoning—CE. The correct answer choice is (B)
In this stimulus, the marketing consultant passes judgment on LRG’s advertising campaign. Apparently, the consultant had previously predicted that the campaign would be unpopular with customers, and would not effectively promote LRG’s new products. LRG did not accept the consultant’s advice and, based on the advice of another consultant, went ahead with the campaign. Now, LRG’s new products are selling very poorly and their sales figures are down for the season. Based on this, the original consultant concludes that “the advertising campaign was ill conceived.”
This is a causal argument. Essentially, the consultant has concluded that the advertising campaign caused the poor sales results:
- Cause Effect
advertising campaign poor sales
The question stem identifies this as a Flaw in the Reasoning question. Our prephrase is that the marketing consultant assumes that the advertising campaign is the cause of LRG’s low sales figures, when there may be some alternate cause for those numbers.
Answer choice (A): This answer choice is inconsistent with the consultant’s argument. If the consultant were to assume that LRG’s sales would have been even lower without the advertising campaign, then the argument would be treating the campaign as a positive, rather than a negative, influence.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice because it correctly identifies the consultant’s flawed use of causal reasoning, assuming that the campaign is the cause of the poor sales figures, when some other cause may be at work. Here, the answer choice specifically points to the possibility that the alternate cause is a set of economic factors unrelated to the advertising campaign.
Answer choice (C): Here, the answer choice is incorrect because the consultant did not make any comparison between the sales performance of new and established products.
Answer choice (D): The consultant did not reach any conclusion about higher sales of established products, so the argument could not have assumed what caused higher sales of those products.
Answer choice (E): This answer choice describes a flaw in conditional reasoning. However, the consultant’s conclusion did not result from the use of conditional reasoning.