- Mon Apr 18, 2016 6:14 pm
#23228
Complete Question Explanation
Parallel Reasoning. The correct answer choice is (A)
With this Parallel question, as with many of this type, abstraction can make it easier to find the answer choice with mirror reasoning. Two sources of possible evidence (writers and statutes) are mentioned, and something is absent from both of them. Therefore, even though many people think this activity occurred, it is probably unlikely. Basically (abstractly), the absence of something according to research shows that common public opinion is likely inaccurate.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice. Two sources are mentioned from which something (a huge fire) is absent. Therefore, although people think it happened, it probably did not. As in the stimulus, research shows that common public opinion is likely inaccurate.
Answer choice (B): This answer choice is entirely different because the two sources conflict and the argument concerns which source is better. Its reasoning does not match that of the stimulus, where the two sources agree.
Answer choice (C): This answer choice mentions newspapers to tempt you, but there really is no aspect of the stimulus's argument present in the reasoning of this argument. There is no research into sources and there is no debunking of public opinion.
Answer choice (D): This answer choice draws an inference from something printed in the paper. Although it says "did not explicitly say" it does use something in the paper to draw a conclusion. The stimulus uses something absent from the sources to form an opinion. Also, the conclusion of this answer is entirely different from the stimulus's conclusion.
Answer choice (E): Like answer choice (B), this answer choice also discusses which source is better when the two disagree. The two sources in the stimulus, again, both contain the same absence.
Parallel Reasoning. The correct answer choice is (A)
With this Parallel question, as with many of this type, abstraction can make it easier to find the answer choice with mirror reasoning. Two sources of possible evidence (writers and statutes) are mentioned, and something is absent from both of them. Therefore, even though many people think this activity occurred, it is probably unlikely. Basically (abstractly), the absence of something according to research shows that common public opinion is likely inaccurate.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice. Two sources are mentioned from which something (a huge fire) is absent. Therefore, although people think it happened, it probably did not. As in the stimulus, research shows that common public opinion is likely inaccurate.
Answer choice (B): This answer choice is entirely different because the two sources conflict and the argument concerns which source is better. Its reasoning does not match that of the stimulus, where the two sources agree.
Answer choice (C): This answer choice mentions newspapers to tempt you, but there really is no aspect of the stimulus's argument present in the reasoning of this argument. There is no research into sources and there is no debunking of public opinion.
Answer choice (D): This answer choice draws an inference from something printed in the paper. Although it says "did not explicitly say" it does use something in the paper to draw a conclusion. The stimulus uses something absent from the sources to form an opinion. Also, the conclusion of this answer is entirely different from the stimulus's conclusion.
Answer choice (E): Like answer choice (B), this answer choice also discusses which source is better when the two disagree. The two sources in the stimulus, again, both contain the same absence.