- Wed Aug 20, 2014 11:00 pm
#35172
Complete Question Explanation
Flaw in the Reasoning—CE. The correct answer choice is (A)
This stimulus discusses a study that looked at the relationship between laughter and the human immune system. In the study, hospital patients watched comic videos. When they watched these videos, their immune systems grew stronger, which the author claims is an indication that “laughter can aid recovery from illness.”
Not all of the patients had identical results, though. Those patients who had a greater tendency to laugh in the first place (what we will call the "frequent laugher" group) showed much greater gains in their immune systems. Based on this differing result, the author suddenly concludes that a patient who has a greater tendency to laugh will get more help in their recovery from even a little laughter than will a patient who does not have as great a tendency to laugh but in fact laughs more. This conclusion is problematic because we can't make a relativistic judgment here: there is no information suggesting that frequent laughers who laugh just a little will benefit more than less frequent laughers who laugh a lot.
This is a Flaw question. Our prephrase is that the author lacked the evidence necessary to reach the argument’s comparative conclusion.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice, since it points out that the argument does not provide evidence of the patients’ actual laughter. It very well may be that the patients with a greater tendency to laugh (the frequent laughers) actually laughed more when watching the videos. The author presented no evidence concerning how much the patients actually laughed, and so there is no support for the conclusion comparing the tendency to laugh and actual laughter as competing causes.
Answer choice (B): While it is true that the argument did not address the relative strengths of the patients’ immune systems to begin with, that comparison is irrelevant to the conclusion, which focused on the differences in their gains and not the absolute strength of their immune systems.
Answer choice (C): The argument made no mention of the “entire population.” This answer choice would be applicable if the argument took evidence regarding the patients’ immune systems and applied that data to a conclusion about the immune systems of the entire population, which the argument did not do.
Answer choice (D): This answer choice can be tricky, but it has to do with an error in causal reasoning and would be applicable if the conclusion improperly inferred causation based on a correlation between an increase in the patients’ immune system and an increase in their tendency to laugh. However, the conclusion did not mention an increase in their tendency to laugh, but rather compared those with a higher tendency to laugh to those with a lower tendency to laugh. If the strengthening of the immune system made the patient more likely to laugh, then based on the context of the stimulus, the more the patient’s immune system improved, the more the patient would be likely to laugh.
Answer choice (E): Although the conclusion did state that those with a higher tendency to laugh were helped more in their recovery, the argument did not assume that those patients recovered more rapidly.
Flaw in the Reasoning—CE. The correct answer choice is (A)
This stimulus discusses a study that looked at the relationship between laughter and the human immune system. In the study, hospital patients watched comic videos. When they watched these videos, their immune systems grew stronger, which the author claims is an indication that “laughter can aid recovery from illness.”
Not all of the patients had identical results, though. Those patients who had a greater tendency to laugh in the first place (what we will call the "frequent laugher" group) showed much greater gains in their immune systems. Based on this differing result, the author suddenly concludes that a patient who has a greater tendency to laugh will get more help in their recovery from even a little laughter than will a patient who does not have as great a tendency to laugh but in fact laughs more. This conclusion is problematic because we can't make a relativistic judgment here: there is no information suggesting that frequent laughers who laugh just a little will benefit more than less frequent laughers who laugh a lot.
This is a Flaw question. Our prephrase is that the author lacked the evidence necessary to reach the argument’s comparative conclusion.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice, since it points out that the argument does not provide evidence of the patients’ actual laughter. It very well may be that the patients with a greater tendency to laugh (the frequent laughers) actually laughed more when watching the videos. The author presented no evidence concerning how much the patients actually laughed, and so there is no support for the conclusion comparing the tendency to laugh and actual laughter as competing causes.
Answer choice (B): While it is true that the argument did not address the relative strengths of the patients’ immune systems to begin with, that comparison is irrelevant to the conclusion, which focused on the differences in their gains and not the absolute strength of their immune systems.
Answer choice (C): The argument made no mention of the “entire population.” This answer choice would be applicable if the argument took evidence regarding the patients’ immune systems and applied that data to a conclusion about the immune systems of the entire population, which the argument did not do.
Answer choice (D): This answer choice can be tricky, but it has to do with an error in causal reasoning and would be applicable if the conclusion improperly inferred causation based on a correlation between an increase in the patients’ immune system and an increase in their tendency to laugh. However, the conclusion did not mention an increase in their tendency to laugh, but rather compared those with a higher tendency to laugh to those with a lower tendency to laugh. If the strengthening of the immune system made the patient more likely to laugh, then based on the context of the stimulus, the more the patient’s immune system improved, the more the patient would be likely to laugh.
Answer choice (E): Although the conclusion did state that those with a higher tendency to laugh were helped more in their recovery, the argument did not assume that those patients recovered more rapidly.