- Tue May 15, 2012 8:24 pm
#4116
Hi guys,
This question is about Preptest 53, Section III ,Question 17. I understood the stimulus as follows:
Prem: A body of circumstantial evidence is like a rope
Prem: Each item of evidence = strand of that rope, additional pieces of evidence strengthen the body of evidence, and if 1 strand breaks, the rope is not broken or its stregth must diminished.
I am having trouble eliminating Contenders and justifying the correct answer. Is the following rationale correct?
-Rule out C because the argument explicitly defined the scope of its conclusion to when 'a few items' are discredited, and it says nothing about when 'many items' are discredited
-Rule out E because the conclusion about the effect of a 'few items being discredited' is not mentioned elsewhere in the argument (the closest thing is 'if *one* strand breaks the strength of the rope is not much dminished, however this refers to only *one* strand/item of evidence being discredited, not *many* as the conclusion refers to)
-Rule out B because the argument makes no such presumption
Then I have real trouble distinguishing between D and A. (D) is definitely *partially correct* in that the argument proceeds by analogy. However is it correct to rule it out on the basis that it is not the case that the argument 'offers no indications of whether the 2 types of things being compared share any similarities?'
Finally, how do we justify 'A'? I proceeded by using the technique we were taught for assumption questions: let it be true and see if this makes the conclusion false. If it is true, than the conclusion may be false because if amongst the 'few items' that are discredited are items that are 'significantly more critical', the conclusion that the overall strength of the evidence is unaffected is untrue.
Sorry, long question, but I am trying to get a handle of the technique taught in the logial reasoning bible, applying them etc... Thanks!
This question is about Preptest 53, Section III ,Question 17. I understood the stimulus as follows:
Prem: A body of circumstantial evidence is like a rope
Prem: Each item of evidence = strand of that rope, additional pieces of evidence strengthen the body of evidence, and if 1 strand breaks, the rope is not broken or its stregth must diminished.
I am having trouble eliminating Contenders and justifying the correct answer. Is the following rationale correct?
-Rule out C because the argument explicitly defined the scope of its conclusion to when 'a few items' are discredited, and it says nothing about when 'many items' are discredited
-Rule out E because the conclusion about the effect of a 'few items being discredited' is not mentioned elsewhere in the argument (the closest thing is 'if *one* strand breaks the strength of the rope is not much dminished, however this refers to only *one* strand/item of evidence being discredited, not *many* as the conclusion refers to)
-Rule out B because the argument makes no such presumption
Then I have real trouble distinguishing between D and A. (D) is definitely *partially correct* in that the argument proceeds by analogy. However is it correct to rule it out on the basis that it is not the case that the argument 'offers no indications of whether the 2 types of things being compared share any similarities?'
Finally, how do we justify 'A'? I proceeded by using the technique we were taught for assumption questions: let it be true and see if this makes the conclusion false. If it is true, than the conclusion may be false because if amongst the 'few items' that are discredited are items that are 'significantly more critical', the conclusion that the overall strength of the evidence is unaffected is untrue.
Sorry, long question, but I am trying to get a handle of the technique taught in the logial reasoning bible, applying them etc... Thanks!