- Wed Jan 21, 2015 12:00 am
#72956
Complete Question Explanation
Flaw in the Reasoning. The correct answer choice is (A).
A fairly straightforward causal argument based on a correlation, this question proved surprisingly challenging due to most of the answers using causal language in ways that proved confusing and distracting.
A medical researcher shares the somewhat surprising results of a far-reaching survey, which indicate that getting at least 8 hours of sleep per night correlates with being less healthy than those who sleep much less. He then concludes that sleeping less is actually good for us, leading to (causing) greater health. Because this is a causal argument, there are several ready-made prephrases at our fingertips: the author has failed to consider alternate causes, or the possibility that the supposed cause and effect are reversed (maybe illness causes us to sleep more?), or problems with the data (surveys are often the source of such problems - here, self-reporting might be inaccurate, for example.) Any of these would make a good answer choice.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice. Here we have a standard Alternate Cause answer, exactly what we should be looking for, and so it should at least be a contender as you move to examine the remaining answer choices. Students who decided not to read the remaining answer choices were, for once, rewarded for being so bold (but don't make that a habit!)
Answer choice (B): This answer is also causal, and might be a flaw IF the author had said something along the lines of less sleep being the SOLE cause of better health, or more sleep being the ONLY cause of the increased incidents of illness. Since the author did not make such a strong claim, but played it safer with a softer claim that less sleep probably helps bolster the body's defenses, this answer does not describe a flaw made by this particular author in this particular case.
Answer choice (C): A conditional answer choice is almost never going to be the correct answer to a causal flaw in the reasoning, and it is not correct in this case. We should select an answer that deals with causal reasoning. Also, take note that the medical researcher never indicated that any phenomenon was sufficient for (meaning absolutely guarantees the occurrence of) another phenomenon, but only that there is a general correlation between two phenomena.
Answer choice (D): This answer reverses what the author did in the stimulus. Our author did not claim that because one thing has some causal impact on another, the two must be correlated; he said that because two things are correlated, one of them probably has some causal impact on the other. A tricky shell game! The correct answer to a Flaw question must describe something that actually happened in the stimulus, and this answer does not pass that test.
Answer choice (E): Translating this answer into simpler English, it is saying "just because one thing doesn't cause a particular problem doesn't mean it causes no problems." As our author is not saying anything about sleep, or a lack of sleep, NOT causing a problem, this answer does not describe anything that occurred in the stimulus, and is therefore a loser.
Flaw in the Reasoning. The correct answer choice is (A).
A fairly straightforward causal argument based on a correlation, this question proved surprisingly challenging due to most of the answers using causal language in ways that proved confusing and distracting.
A medical researcher shares the somewhat surprising results of a far-reaching survey, which indicate that getting at least 8 hours of sleep per night correlates with being less healthy than those who sleep much less. He then concludes that sleeping less is actually good for us, leading to (causing) greater health. Because this is a causal argument, there are several ready-made prephrases at our fingertips: the author has failed to consider alternate causes, or the possibility that the supposed cause and effect are reversed (maybe illness causes us to sleep more?), or problems with the data (surveys are often the source of such problems - here, self-reporting might be inaccurate, for example.) Any of these would make a good answer choice.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice. Here we have a standard Alternate Cause answer, exactly what we should be looking for, and so it should at least be a contender as you move to examine the remaining answer choices. Students who decided not to read the remaining answer choices were, for once, rewarded for being so bold (but don't make that a habit!)
Answer choice (B): This answer is also causal, and might be a flaw IF the author had said something along the lines of less sleep being the SOLE cause of better health, or more sleep being the ONLY cause of the increased incidents of illness. Since the author did not make such a strong claim, but played it safer with a softer claim that less sleep probably helps bolster the body's defenses, this answer does not describe a flaw made by this particular author in this particular case.
Answer choice (C): A conditional answer choice is almost never going to be the correct answer to a causal flaw in the reasoning, and it is not correct in this case. We should select an answer that deals with causal reasoning. Also, take note that the medical researcher never indicated that any phenomenon was sufficient for (meaning absolutely guarantees the occurrence of) another phenomenon, but only that there is a general correlation between two phenomena.
Answer choice (D): This answer reverses what the author did in the stimulus. Our author did not claim that because one thing has some causal impact on another, the two must be correlated; he said that because two things are correlated, one of them probably has some causal impact on the other. A tricky shell game! The correct answer to a Flaw question must describe something that actually happened in the stimulus, and this answer does not pass that test.
Answer choice (E): Translating this answer into simpler English, it is saying "just because one thing doesn't cause a particular problem doesn't mean it causes no problems." As our author is not saying anything about sleep, or a lack of sleep, NOT causing a problem, this answer does not describe anything that occurred in the stimulus, and is therefore a loser.