- Fri May 06, 2016 4:18 pm
#24082
Complete Question Explanation
Flaw in the Reasoning. The correct answer choice is (A)
In this stimulus, the columnist leaps from a discussion regarding Togawa’s testimony inside the courtroom (to which the columnist does not have access) to Togawa’s comments outside the courtroom. The columnist concludes, based on Togawa’s later statements about Pemberton’s guilt, that the jury must not have believed Togawa’s testimony.
What is the problem here? That we can only speculate regarding Togawa’s testimony inside the courtroom—the jury could have believed all of her testimony, if, for example, her general beliefs regarding Pemberton’s guilt never came out during the trial.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice. As discussed above, the columnist fails to consider that Togawa’s testimony may not have included reference to her general beliefs regarding Pemberton’s guilt.
Answer choice (B): The stimulus contains no reference to what “ought” to be, so this answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (C): There is no such presumption presented by the columnist.
Answer choice (D): There is no reference or allusion to dishonesty among witnesses, so this answer choice cannot be correct.
Answer choice (E): There is no reason for this consideration—jury members may disagree, but the argument presented in the stimulus draws conclusions based on the not-guilty verdict, not on any presumption of jury unanimity.
Flaw in the Reasoning. The correct answer choice is (A)
In this stimulus, the columnist leaps from a discussion regarding Togawa’s testimony inside the courtroom (to which the columnist does not have access) to Togawa’s comments outside the courtroom. The columnist concludes, based on Togawa’s later statements about Pemberton’s guilt, that the jury must not have believed Togawa’s testimony.
What is the problem here? That we can only speculate regarding Togawa’s testimony inside the courtroom—the jury could have believed all of her testimony, if, for example, her general beliefs regarding Pemberton’s guilt never came out during the trial.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice. As discussed above, the columnist fails to consider that Togawa’s testimony may not have included reference to her general beliefs regarding Pemberton’s guilt.
Answer choice (B): The stimulus contains no reference to what “ought” to be, so this answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (C): There is no such presumption presented by the columnist.
Answer choice (D): There is no reference or allusion to dishonesty among witnesses, so this answer choice cannot be correct.
Answer choice (E): There is no reason for this consideration—jury members may disagree, but the argument presented in the stimulus draws conclusions based on the not-guilty verdict, not on any presumption of jury unanimity.