- Fri Apr 15, 2016 4:39 pm
#23159
Complete Question Explanation
Flaw in the Reasoning. The correct answer choice is (B)
The first premise in this argument is that doctors have the opportunity to treat patients however they choose. The second premise is that the doctors have a financial incentive to overtreat patients. These premises then lead to a conclusion that because that opportunity and incentive exists, doctors therefore frequently do overtreat patients.
Answer Choice (A) Responsibility is being assigned in the stimulus to doctors, and the involvement of doctors in decisions on how much to treat patients is clearly not purely coincidental.
Answer Choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. Yes, the stimulus tells us that the opportunity is there and the incentive is there for doctors to overtreat. Based upon this information, it may be likely that doctors frequently overtreat in order to receive financial rewards, but it is not an absolute conclusion that follows from the premises. Therefore, the reasoning in the argument is flawed.
Answer Choice (C) At no point are the decisions of doctors in this stimulus presented as capricious and idiosyncratic. In fact, the decision to overtreat in order to receive financial reward could likely be seen as based upon well-defined principles, even if those principles are morally questionable.
Answer Choice (D) No choices in this stimulus have been depicted as arbitrary. The stimulus author clearly establishes a belief that doctors have specific reasons in mind for overtreating, it is just an issue of the author thinking that those reasons are unethical.
Answer Choice (E) This stimulus does not deal in any way with the irrelevance of certain considerations in making a decision. The focus is on considerations that the stimulus author feels are more relevant to the doctors' financial well-being, as opposed to the physical well-being of their patients.
Flaw in the Reasoning. The correct answer choice is (B)
The first premise in this argument is that doctors have the opportunity to treat patients however they choose. The second premise is that the doctors have a financial incentive to overtreat patients. These premises then lead to a conclusion that because that opportunity and incentive exists, doctors therefore frequently do overtreat patients.
Answer Choice (A) Responsibility is being assigned in the stimulus to doctors, and the involvement of doctors in decisions on how much to treat patients is clearly not purely coincidental.
Answer Choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. Yes, the stimulus tells us that the opportunity is there and the incentive is there for doctors to overtreat. Based upon this information, it may be likely that doctors frequently overtreat in order to receive financial rewards, but it is not an absolute conclusion that follows from the premises. Therefore, the reasoning in the argument is flawed.
Answer Choice (C) At no point are the decisions of doctors in this stimulus presented as capricious and idiosyncratic. In fact, the decision to overtreat in order to receive financial reward could likely be seen as based upon well-defined principles, even if those principles are morally questionable.
Answer Choice (D) No choices in this stimulus have been depicted as arbitrary. The stimulus author clearly establishes a belief that doctors have specific reasons in mind for overtreating, it is just an issue of the author thinking that those reasons are unethical.
Answer Choice (E) This stimulus does not deal in any way with the irrelevance of certain considerations in making a decision. The focus is on considerations that the stimulus author feels are more relevant to the doctors' financial well-being, as opposed to the physical well-being of their patients.