- Thu Jan 21, 2016 12:00 am
#73431
Complete Question Explanation
Flaw in the Reasoning. The correct answer choice is (C).
We learn some information about two different groups of fish with a similar trait, teeth that are specialized for scraping algae. The author then provide a conditional premise - if the fish were closely related, then the trait evolved only once:
Closely Related Evolved Only Once
The author tells us next that the two groups of fish are not closely related, meaning that the sufficient condition has not occurred:
Closely Related
From this piece of information, the author improperly concludes that the necessary condition also did not occur:
Evolved Only Once
This is a classic error of conditional reasoning, a Mistaken Negation, and the correct answer will describe it using the language of conditionality.
Answer choice (A): This describes a causal flaw, not a conditional flaw. There was no causal aspect to the argument.
Answer choice (B): A "lack of evidence" flaw, this does not describe what occurred in the stimulus. The evidence was not that something has not been confirmed, but rather that something HAS been confirmed - the fish are NOT closely related.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice. As expected, conditional language is present in the correct answer. Do not be dissuaded by the fact that the answer seems to describe a Mistaken Reversal rather than a Mistaken Negation, because Mistaken Reversals and Mistaken Negations are the contrapositive of each other and are thus logically equivalent. In other words, they are the same thing as each other, and describing one is just as good as describing the other.
Answer choice (D): The argument had no element of likelihood to it, nor was there any claim that anything did occur. Instead, the argument concludes that something is not true.
Answer choice (E): This answer describes a mix of an improper Appeal to Authority and some form of survey flaw based on an unrepresentative sample. But the argument did not rely on the testimony of experts, as the author is the one claiming that the conditional relationship exists, and it is the author who mistakenly negates the conditions. The biologists made no such claims in the stimulus.
Flaw in the Reasoning. The correct answer choice is (C).
We learn some information about two different groups of fish with a similar trait, teeth that are specialized for scraping algae. The author then provide a conditional premise - if the fish were closely related, then the trait evolved only once:
Closely Related Evolved Only Once
The author tells us next that the two groups of fish are not closely related, meaning that the sufficient condition has not occurred:
Closely Related
From this piece of information, the author improperly concludes that the necessary condition also did not occur:
Evolved Only Once
This is a classic error of conditional reasoning, a Mistaken Negation, and the correct answer will describe it using the language of conditionality.
Answer choice (A): This describes a causal flaw, not a conditional flaw. There was no causal aspect to the argument.
Answer choice (B): A "lack of evidence" flaw, this does not describe what occurred in the stimulus. The evidence was not that something has not been confirmed, but rather that something HAS been confirmed - the fish are NOT closely related.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice. As expected, conditional language is present in the correct answer. Do not be dissuaded by the fact that the answer seems to describe a Mistaken Reversal rather than a Mistaken Negation, because Mistaken Reversals and Mistaken Negations are the contrapositive of each other and are thus logically equivalent. In other words, they are the same thing as each other, and describing one is just as good as describing the other.
Answer choice (D): The argument had no element of likelihood to it, nor was there any claim that anything did occur. Instead, the argument concludes that something is not true.
Answer choice (E): This answer describes a mix of an improper Appeal to Authority and some form of survey flaw based on an unrepresentative sample. But the argument did not rely on the testimony of experts, as the author is the one claiming that the conditional relationship exists, and it is the author who mistakenly negates the conditions. The biologists made no such claims in the stimulus.