- Fri Jan 21, 2011 12:00 am
#23432
Complete Question Explanation
Parallel Flaw. The correct answer choice is (E)
The author of this stimulus makes a leap in logic: Since human mental events cannot be explained with statistical analysis, it cannot be explained with any of the physical sciences. This conclusion is clearly overly broad, and is not justified by the premise provided. The correct answer choice will, most likely, draw a similarly over-broad conclusion.
Answer choice (A): This cannot be the correct answer choice, as the reasoning in this answer is valid. If computer modeling requires predictability, then unpredictable wind-resistance cannot be understood with computer modeling.
Answer choice (B): The flaw here is different from that found in the stimulus. In this case, the argument goes as follows: The psychology of emotion can only be explained in cases involving humans. Since there are other cases that don't involve humans, the psychology of emotion can never be used to explain music's effects on emotional states.
Answer choice (C): The flaw here is also distinctive: the best way to explain why something is a particular color is based on two facets—light and matter. Since information about one of those facets (matter) is sometimes unavailable, there is no relationship between those two and facets and why something is a particular color. This flaw is basically "throwing out the baby with the bathwater." The author is basically asserting that if you cant have all of the information all of the time, then none of the information is pertinent.
Answer choice (D): The flaw here, like those found in the other incorrect answer choices above, is different from that found in the stimulus. Here, the invalid presumption is that because we cannot definitively determine which theory is correct, none of the theories are likely to be correct. This is not valid, of course—a theory that cannot be proven is not necessarily untrue—but this answer choices does not provide the parallel flaw that we seek, so this answer is incorrect.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. The author here draws an unjustified conclusion much like that of the stimulus. Because a narrative is not a good way to explain certain ancient historical events, those events cannot be explained by historical explanation of any sort.
Parallel Flaw. The correct answer choice is (E)
The author of this stimulus makes a leap in logic: Since human mental events cannot be explained with statistical analysis, it cannot be explained with any of the physical sciences. This conclusion is clearly overly broad, and is not justified by the premise provided. The correct answer choice will, most likely, draw a similarly over-broad conclusion.
Answer choice (A): This cannot be the correct answer choice, as the reasoning in this answer is valid. If computer modeling requires predictability, then unpredictable wind-resistance cannot be understood with computer modeling.
Answer choice (B): The flaw here is different from that found in the stimulus. In this case, the argument goes as follows: The psychology of emotion can only be explained in cases involving humans. Since there are other cases that don't involve humans, the psychology of emotion can never be used to explain music's effects on emotional states.
Answer choice (C): The flaw here is also distinctive: the best way to explain why something is a particular color is based on two facets—light and matter. Since information about one of those facets (matter) is sometimes unavailable, there is no relationship between those two and facets and why something is a particular color. This flaw is basically "throwing out the baby with the bathwater." The author is basically asserting that if you cant have all of the information all of the time, then none of the information is pertinent.
Answer choice (D): The flaw here, like those found in the other incorrect answer choices above, is different from that found in the stimulus. Here, the invalid presumption is that because we cannot definitively determine which theory is correct, none of the theories are likely to be correct. This is not valid, of course—a theory that cannot be proven is not necessarily untrue—but this answer choices does not provide the parallel flaw that we seek, so this answer is incorrect.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. The author here draws an unjustified conclusion much like that of the stimulus. Because a narrative is not a good way to explain certain ancient historical events, those events cannot be explained by historical explanation of any sort.