- Fri Jan 21, 2011 12:00 am
#23169
Complete Question Explanation
Flaw in the Reasoning-SN. The correct answer choice is (A)
In this stimulus, S. R. Evans displays classic circular reasoning. The critics say she is not a poet, but she says only true poets are able to determine that. She has read their work and determined that they are not poets, so they should be rejected. However, in order for her to make that judgment, she would have to be a poet as well, which is what she is trying to prove. In other words, she assumes that she is a poet, so she has the ability to say that the critics who are saying she is not a poet are wrong. She presupposes (that she is a poet) what she sets out to prove (that the critics who say she is not a poet are wrong).
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice. As stated above, only true poets can make the judgment about the critics work. So she presupposes that she is a true poet in order to prove that she is a true poet.
Answer choice (B) This would be the either/or fallacy, but it does not apply in this case. She is talking only about herself and a certain group of critics.
Answer choice (C) There is no implicit claim like this in the stimulus; it only talks about judging poets based on their work.
Answer choice (D) Again, this answer choice tries to tempt you with the either/or fallacy. The argument does not claim that a person cannot be both a critic and a poet; it simply claims that those critics whose work S. R. Evans has read are not poets because their work lacks poetic creativity.
Answer choice (E) There is no mention of "improving" poetry in the stimulus, which should immediately tell you that this is not the correct answer. We are looking for a flaw in the reasoning, not an inevitable conclusion that seems untrue. Furthermore, the stimulus does not lead to this conclusion. True poets can, in fact, criticize their own poetry.
Flaw in the Reasoning-SN. The correct answer choice is (A)
In this stimulus, S. R. Evans displays classic circular reasoning. The critics say she is not a poet, but she says only true poets are able to determine that. She has read their work and determined that they are not poets, so they should be rejected. However, in order for her to make that judgment, she would have to be a poet as well, which is what she is trying to prove. In other words, she assumes that she is a poet, so she has the ability to say that the critics who are saying she is not a poet are wrong. She presupposes (that she is a poet) what she sets out to prove (that the critics who say she is not a poet are wrong).
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice. As stated above, only true poets can make the judgment about the critics work. So she presupposes that she is a true poet in order to prove that she is a true poet.
Answer choice (B) This would be the either/or fallacy, but it does not apply in this case. She is talking only about herself and a certain group of critics.
Answer choice (C) There is no implicit claim like this in the stimulus; it only talks about judging poets based on their work.
Answer choice (D) Again, this answer choice tries to tempt you with the either/or fallacy. The argument does not claim that a person cannot be both a critic and a poet; it simply claims that those critics whose work S. R. Evans has read are not poets because their work lacks poetic creativity.
Answer choice (E) There is no mention of "improving" poetry in the stimulus, which should immediately tell you that this is not the correct answer. We are looking for a flaw in the reasoning, not an inevitable conclusion that seems untrue. Furthermore, the stimulus does not lead to this conclusion. True poets can, in fact, criticize their own poetry.