- Thu Jan 21, 2016 12:00 am
#34817
Complete Question Explanation
Parallel Flaw. The correct answer choice is (B)
This stimulus is a collection of conditional reasoning statements, from which the author draws a questionable conclusion. First, the author provides that when a squirrel visits a bird feeder, the feeder attracts less birds:
The question is followed by a Parallel Flaw question, so the correct answer choice will likely provide two conditional statements, and link two necessary conditions to draw a flawed conclusion.
Answer choice (A): The reasoning here is somewhat different from that found in the stimulus. The author begins with two conditional statements that almost create a double-arrow.
If tire pressure is too low, it will wear out prematurely:
Therefore, if an owner checks the tires regularly, the tires won’t wear out early:
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. Like the stimulus, this choice provides two conditional statements, followed by a flawed conclusion linking the necessary conditions. If the air pressure is too low, a tire will wear out early:
Answer choice (C): This choice begins much like the others, with a straightforward conditional statement: If car owners don’t check their tire pressure regularly, their tires can wear out early:
This line of reasoning is very different from that found in the stimulus; in particular, the conclusion here is not flawed, so there is no way that this choice can parallel the flawed reasoning found in the stimulus.
Answer choice (D): This incorrect answer choice starts out in the right direction, but then goes off course with valid reasoning. The first conditional statement is that if the pressure in a tire is too low, it will wear out prematurely:
If the owner fails to check the pressure regularly, tire pressure will become too low:
Answer choice (E): Rather than following the line of reasoning from the stimulus, this choice presents a flaw of a different sort.
Parallel Flaw. The correct answer choice is (B)
This stimulus is a collection of conditional reasoning statements, from which the author draws a questionable conclusion. First, the author provides that when a squirrel visits a bird feeder, the feeder attracts less birds:
- Squirrels eat from feeder feeder attracts less birds
- Squirrels eat from feeder protective cover
- Feeder attracts less birds
Squirrels eat from feeder +
protective cover
- Protective cover Feeder will attract less birds
The question is followed by a Parallel Flaw question, so the correct answer choice will likely provide two conditional statements, and link two necessary conditions to draw a flawed conclusion.
Answer choice (A): The reasoning here is somewhat different from that found in the stimulus. The author begins with two conditional statements that almost create a double-arrow.
If tire pressure is too low, it will wear out prematurely:
- Tire pressure too low wear out prematurely
- Wear out prematurely low pressure a likely cause
Therefore, if an owner checks the tires regularly, the tires won’t wear out early:
- Owner checks pressure regularly Tires will wear out prematurely
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. Like the stimulus, this choice provides two conditional statements, followed by a flawed conclusion linking the necessary conditions. If the air pressure is too low, a tire will wear out early:
- Air pressure too low premature wear
- Air pressure too low fail to check pressure regularly
- premature wear
Air pressure too low +
fail to check pressure regularly
- Fail to check pressure regularly premature wear
Answer choice (C): This choice begins much like the others, with a straightforward conditional statement: If car owners don’t check their tire pressure regularly, their tires can wear out early:
- regular pressure checks wear out prematurely
- regular tire press checks owners unaware
And the contrapositive: Owners aware regular tire pressure checks
This line of reasoning is very different from that found in the stimulus; in particular, the conclusion here is not flawed, so there is no way that this choice can parallel the flawed reasoning found in the stimulus.
Answer choice (D): This incorrect answer choice starts out in the right direction, but then goes off course with valid reasoning. The first conditional statement is that if the pressure in a tire is too low, it will wear out prematurely:
- Pressure too low wear out prematurely
If the owner fails to check the pressure regularly, tire pressure will become too low:
- Fails to check pressure regularly pressure too low
- Fails to check pressure regularly pressure too low wear out prematurely
Answer choice (E): Rather than following the line of reasoning from the stimulus, this choice presents a flaw of a different sort.