- Sun Sep 08, 2013 5:15 pm
#10813
NDC2124,
I'm not certain if you had a specific question related to the question referenced in the post title, but I figured I'd map out the right way to think about the question and you let follow up if necessary.
This question is a Parallel Reasoning - Flaw EXCEPT question. Your task is to pick the answer choice that does NOT contain an argument with a flawed logical structure similar to that of the argument in the stimulus. In the stimulus, the conclusion that the universe must have an elegant structure was based on the elegance some of its constituents members, i.e., each of the smallest particles.
This logical flaw is known as a error of composition, in which you conclude the whole has a certain characteristic based on information that one of its parts has that characteristic. This concept is related to the error of division, in which you conclude that because the whole has a certain characteristic, then each of the parts must also have that characteristic.
Each of the choices other than (B), which is the correct answer, shares this flaw. (B) is correct because the premise relates the substance of every piece of the desk. If each part of the desk is made of metal, it is valid to conclude that the desk is made of metal. That characteristic is inherent to each piece, and is not simply an opinion regarding it. In each of the wrong answer choices, as in the stimulus, the characteristic of the part is not an inherent quality, but is an opinion regarding it, which does not necessarily translate to a conclusion regarding that quality of the whole (e.g., elegant, nearly perfectly engineered, rectangular, sturdy, well-constructed.
That is not to say it is impossible to have an error of composition when the quality of the part described in the premise is an inherent quality. For example, if you had the premise, "one leg of the table is made of metal," it would be an error of composition to conclude the entire table is made of metal. The distinction here is that the premise referred in answer choice (B) referred to "each part."
As to your question regarding the phrase "at the expense of," as with most things it's best to consider the context of the statement rather than obey a mechanical rule. Here, the phrase reflects that there is a trade-off for gaining a positive. So, in a sentence in which something is gained "at the expense of something else," the expense will a loss by whichever part is not listed as a positive having been received. In your example, the positive received was "the equal right to basic liberties." So, that positive came at the cost, or expense, of "creating inequalities in the distribution of income and wealth."