- Tue Mar 19, 2013 11:00 pm
#34826
Complete Question Explanation
Flaw in the Reasoning—CE. The correct answer choice is (A)
This political scientist says that if people believe that problems can only be solved by big groups of people changing their minds about something (and that type of change doesn’t normally arise from government action), those people become unenthusiastic about voting:
The problem reflected in this argument is that the author jumps from a premise about a possible cause (the belief that important problems are solved by large attitude shifts, not government action), to the conclusion that this must be the cause.
Not surprisingly, this choice is followed by a Flaw question, so the correct answer choice will present the flaw discussed above. Note also that the correct answer choice when dealing with a Cause-Effect flaw is likely to include terms such as "cause," "effect," or synonymous terms.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice. It provides that the author lacks justification for the presumption that the referenced belief is the only cause there is for decreasing voter turnout (note also that this is the only choice that features the term "cause").
Answer choice (B): The stimulus deals with the belief that important problems cannot be addressed with government action, and how that can decrease enthusiasm for voting. This is not the author's presumption, and it is not the argument's flaw.
Answer choice (C): This choice presents a flaw that is different from the answer prephrased above, so this cannot be the correct answer to this Flaw question.
Answer choice (D): The author does not undermine the claim that people don't believe that important problems can be addressed via political means. On the contrary, the author presumes this to be the cause of decreasing voter turnout.
Answer choice (E): The author does not presume that voter apathy prevents attitudinal changes, the author attributes voter apathy to an increasing belief in the need for attitudinal changes to address important problems.
Flaw in the Reasoning—CE. The correct answer choice is (A)
This political scientist says that if people believe that problems can only be solved by big groups of people changing their minds about something (and that type of change doesn’t normally arise from government action), those people become unenthusiastic about voting:
- Cause Effect
Believe important problems solved by large unenthusiastic about voting
attitude shifts (not government action)
The problem reflected in this argument is that the author jumps from a premise about a possible cause (the belief that important problems are solved by large attitude shifts, not government action), to the conclusion that this must be the cause.
Not surprisingly, this choice is followed by a Flaw question, so the correct answer choice will present the flaw discussed above. Note also that the correct answer choice when dealing with a Cause-Effect flaw is likely to include terms such as "cause," "effect," or synonymous terms.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice. It provides that the author lacks justification for the presumption that the referenced belief is the only cause there is for decreasing voter turnout (note also that this is the only choice that features the term "cause").
Answer choice (B): The stimulus deals with the belief that important problems cannot be addressed with government action, and how that can decrease enthusiasm for voting. This is not the author's presumption, and it is not the argument's flaw.
Answer choice (C): This choice presents a flaw that is different from the answer prephrased above, so this cannot be the correct answer to this Flaw question.
Answer choice (D): The author does not undermine the claim that people don't believe that important problems can be addressed via political means. On the contrary, the author presumes this to be the cause of decreasing voter turnout.
Answer choice (E): The author does not presume that voter apathy prevents attitudinal changes, the author attributes voter apathy to an increasing belief in the need for attitudinal changes to address important problems.