- Wed Apr 27, 2016 9:33 am
#23470
Complete Question Explanation
Flaw in the Reasoning-#%. The correct answer choice is (B)
In this stimulus the author alleges political preference on the part of reporters, who voted overwhelmingly (89% of them) for the incumbent in the last election. The author asserts that this bias manifest itself in news program content, which was negative on the challenger about 54% of the time, and negative on the incumbent only 30% of the time.
What is the problem with this argument? If these two acted exactly the same, then the news programs would clearly be biased. If, however, most of the news about the challenger was empirically negative (as in the challenger was involved in more scandals, for example), then this would explain why we would see such a high percentage of negative stories about the challenger in the news.
Answer choice (A): The argument doesn't presume that they receive equal amounts of coverage, but rather that there are equal proportions of positive versus negative news stories between the candidates. One way to see this answer as problematic is that the stimulus uses percentage information, which automatically disconnects the analysis from actual numbers (and actual numbers are what is needed to justify the "amounts' mentioned in this answer).
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. The author doesn't consider that maybe the challenger is giving the media more negative material to work with—maybe the challenger has been involved in a number of shady business deals or had a scandalous relationship that came to light during the election. Unequal coverage can be justified if the actual actions of each candidate are demonstrably different. This might even be why the reporters voted so much for the incumbent in the last election.
Answer choice (C): The author does not make such a value judgment, does not claim that it is detrimental, but rather merely asserts (incorrectly) that bias does have an effect on negative news reporting.
Answer choice (D): The argument is not concerned with effect on the electorate, but just on whether bias can affect relatively how much negative news is reported on a candidate.
Answer choice (E): The source of the reporters' preference for the incumbent is not important—we know that they showed preference in the last election. The relevant question here is whether or not that preference caused bias in the news reporting.
Flaw in the Reasoning-#%. The correct answer choice is (B)
In this stimulus the author alleges political preference on the part of reporters, who voted overwhelmingly (89% of them) for the incumbent in the last election. The author asserts that this bias manifest itself in news program content, which was negative on the challenger about 54% of the time, and negative on the incumbent only 30% of the time.
What is the problem with this argument? If these two acted exactly the same, then the news programs would clearly be biased. If, however, most of the news about the challenger was empirically negative (as in the challenger was involved in more scandals, for example), then this would explain why we would see such a high percentage of negative stories about the challenger in the news.
Answer choice (A): The argument doesn't presume that they receive equal amounts of coverage, but rather that there are equal proportions of positive versus negative news stories between the candidates. One way to see this answer as problematic is that the stimulus uses percentage information, which automatically disconnects the analysis from actual numbers (and actual numbers are what is needed to justify the "amounts' mentioned in this answer).
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. The author doesn't consider that maybe the challenger is giving the media more negative material to work with—maybe the challenger has been involved in a number of shady business deals or had a scandalous relationship that came to light during the election. Unequal coverage can be justified if the actual actions of each candidate are demonstrably different. This might even be why the reporters voted so much for the incumbent in the last election.
Answer choice (C): The author does not make such a value judgment, does not claim that it is detrimental, but rather merely asserts (incorrectly) that bias does have an effect on negative news reporting.
Answer choice (D): The argument is not concerned with effect on the electorate, but just on whether bias can affect relatively how much negative news is reported on a candidate.
Answer choice (E): The source of the reporters' preference for the incumbent is not important—we know that they showed preference in the last election. The relevant question here is whether or not that preference caused bias in the news reporting.