- Mon Nov 06, 2017 2:21 pm
#41240
In reviewing the applicants, we have come across a number of excellent candidates, and thus we must now separate candidates based on an analysis of past actions. Dr. Jones is known to have violated the ethical rules once before. Therefore,I put this down as a time shift error since it is basing the argument off an event that had happened in the past. The book says it's an exceptional case/over generalization. I can see the case for both, but my question is does it matter if you can distinguish between the two if you are recognizing that a flaw exists? Theoretically, if a the question stem asked to identify the flaw and one answer choice said "uncritically draws an inference from what has been true in the past to what will be true later" and another says "supports a larger claim on the basis of a single example" (or similar wording that basically says "time shift error" and "over generalization" respectively) then I would have a tough time choosing between the two. Could someone explain why it is definitively over generalization/exceptional case and not a time shift error?
we can be sure she has already violated the rules again.