- Sat Jan 21, 2012 12:00 am
#35628
Complete Question Explanation
Flaw in the Reasoning. The correct answer choice is (A)
This counselor attempts to make a case for harsh criticism: one needs a motive to change, unpleasant criticism can provide such a motive and, the counselor points out, criticism that is harsh happens to be unpleasant. The counselor then jumps to the conclusion that harsh criticism is the only way to bring change:
So, the counselor determines one means of bringing change, and concludes that this must be the only way.
The question stem requires you to find the best description of this flaw; the problem here is that the counselor chooses one sufficient means (harsh criticism) and then concludes, questionably, that it is the only possibility.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice. As discussed above, the counselor establishes that harsh criticism is a sufficient motive for change, and then concludes that it is the only possibility—in other words, a necessity.
Answer choice (B): The counselor’s conclusion is that criticism must be harsh—if it is to motivate change. This argument does not involve criticism that isn’t intended to bring change, nor does it need to, so the “failure” to address this possibility is not a flaw in the counselor’s argument, and this cannot be the correct answer choice.
Answer choice (C): The counselor doesn’t presume that motivation will always bring change (this would be diagrammed as: motivation change), but instead points out that change requires motive (properly diagrammed as: change motive). Since this choice is not accurate, it cannot be the one that describes the stimulus’ flaw.
Answer choice (D): The counselor does not confuse the motivation to do something with the motivation to avoid something, so this is not the flaw in the counselor’s reasoning and cannot be the right answer choice.
Answer choice (E): The counselor doesn’t really refute an argument—but instead questions the notion that criticism should be gentle. Further, the counselor doesn’t say that people who think that criticism should be gentle are necessarily wrong—just that they should consider what it takes to change.
Flaw in the Reasoning. The correct answer choice is (A)
This counselor attempts to make a case for harsh criticism: one needs a motive to change, unpleasant criticism can provide such a motive and, the counselor points out, criticism that is harsh happens to be unpleasant. The counselor then jumps to the conclusion that harsh criticism is the only way to bring change:
- Premise: Change requires motive
Premise: Unpleasant (and specifically, harsh) criticism provides such a motive
Conclusion: Therefore harsh criticism must be the only way to bring change.
So, the counselor determines one means of bringing change, and concludes that this must be the only way.
The question stem requires you to find the best description of this flaw; the problem here is that the counselor chooses one sufficient means (harsh criticism) and then concludes, questionably, that it is the only possibility.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice. As discussed above, the counselor establishes that harsh criticism is a sufficient motive for change, and then concludes that it is the only possibility—in other words, a necessity.
Answer choice (B): The counselor’s conclusion is that criticism must be harsh—if it is to motivate change. This argument does not involve criticism that isn’t intended to bring change, nor does it need to, so the “failure” to address this possibility is not a flaw in the counselor’s argument, and this cannot be the correct answer choice.
Answer choice (C): The counselor doesn’t presume that motivation will always bring change (this would be diagrammed as: motivation change), but instead points out that change requires motive (properly diagrammed as: change motive). Since this choice is not accurate, it cannot be the one that describes the stimulus’ flaw.
Answer choice (D): The counselor does not confuse the motivation to do something with the motivation to avoid something, so this is not the flaw in the counselor’s reasoning and cannot be the right answer choice.
Answer choice (E): The counselor doesn’t really refute an argument—but instead questions the notion that criticism should be gentle. Further, the counselor doesn’t say that people who think that criticism should be gentle are necessarily wrong—just that they should consider what it takes to change.