- Tue Apr 26, 2016 1:50 pm
#23415
Complete Question Explanation
Parallel Flaw-SN. The correct answer choice is (C)
The stimulus asserts that since abundant rainfall in sub-Saharan Africa precedes periods in which hurricanes hit the US with greater frequency, the sub-Saharan rainfall helps cause the winds that lead to hurricanes.
The stimulus contains causal reasoning, and thus the normal potential causal flaws.
First, the argument assumes that the sub-Saharan rainfall is a cause, but it is possible that, for instance, the sub-Saharan rainfall is simply caused by another thing that also causes hurricanes.
Furthermore, the argument assumes that when the US is hit by more hurricanes, that is because there are more hurricanes in general. However, there are other possibilities. For example, it might be that there are general weather patterns that make it more likely for hurricanes to hit the US, without an increase in the number of total hurricanes.
Answer choice (A): This response requires the linking assumption that exercise or sleep leads to health. However, the stimulus never introduced such a totally new element in its conclusion.
Answer choice (B): This choice makes the totally unwarranted assumption that more intersections will not mean more places for pedestrians to be hit. In a way, it also assumes that speed is the only cause of danger to pedestrians. However, this choice makes a specific alternative cause obvious, and the stimulus does not, so this response is weak. That and the fact that the stimulus considered tendency and partial causality rather than certainty make this choice wrong.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice: This response assumes that a correlation indicates a causality, precisely the general mistake that the stimulus made.
Answer choice (D): This response contains improper reasoning, but is not similar to the stimulus. This choice contains contrasting, polar opposite situations, but the stimulus did not.
Answer choice (E): This answer choice mistakenly moves from possibility to certainty, but the stimulus did not do any such thing. The stimulus merely implied a poorly supported causal assumption.
Parallel Flaw-SN. The correct answer choice is (C)
The stimulus asserts that since abundant rainfall in sub-Saharan Africa precedes periods in which hurricanes hit the US with greater frequency, the sub-Saharan rainfall helps cause the winds that lead to hurricanes.
The stimulus contains causal reasoning, and thus the normal potential causal flaws.
First, the argument assumes that the sub-Saharan rainfall is a cause, but it is possible that, for instance, the sub-Saharan rainfall is simply caused by another thing that also causes hurricanes.
Furthermore, the argument assumes that when the US is hit by more hurricanes, that is because there are more hurricanes in general. However, there are other possibilities. For example, it might be that there are general weather patterns that make it more likely for hurricanes to hit the US, without an increase in the number of total hurricanes.
Answer choice (A): This response requires the linking assumption that exercise or sleep leads to health. However, the stimulus never introduced such a totally new element in its conclusion.
Answer choice (B): This choice makes the totally unwarranted assumption that more intersections will not mean more places for pedestrians to be hit. In a way, it also assumes that speed is the only cause of danger to pedestrians. However, this choice makes a specific alternative cause obvious, and the stimulus does not, so this response is weak. That and the fact that the stimulus considered tendency and partial causality rather than certainty make this choice wrong.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice: This response assumes that a correlation indicates a causality, precisely the general mistake that the stimulus made.
Answer choice (D): This response contains improper reasoning, but is not similar to the stimulus. This choice contains contrasting, polar opposite situations, but the stimulus did not.
Answer choice (E): This answer choice mistakenly moves from possibility to certainty, but the stimulus did not do any such thing. The stimulus merely implied a poorly supported causal assumption.