- Tue Apr 26, 2016 2:19 pm
#23418
Complete Question Explanation
Parallel Flaw—CE. The correct answer choice is (D)
The flaw in the reasoning found in this stimulus is a fairly common logical flaw—the notion that failure to prove something means that we can no longer make such a claim. In truth there are many theories which have not been definitively proved but are still generally accepted. The author presents this basic argument:
We cannot prove a link between the triceratops' extinction and asteroid impact, so we cannot claim that asteroid impact was the cause.
The correct answer choice will be guilty of the same logical fallacy: the mistaken notion that a failure to prove something definitively takes away our right to assert the claim.
Answer choice (A): The reasoning here is flawed, but this choice does not parallel the flawed logic found in the stimulus. In this case, the flaw is the mistaken belief that if two people aren't each individually capable of lifting something alone, they are not capable of lifting it as a pair either. This has nothing to do with a failure to definitively prove an assertion, so this answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (B): This answer choice presents a restatement that appears to be valid, so this cannot parallel the flawed logic found in the stimulus.
Answer choice (C): This answer choice is probably, for many, the most attractive of the wrong answer choices. It starts along the right lines, pointing out that two assertions have not been conclusively proven. The conclusion here, however, is that the opposite has been conclusively proven. This is subtly distinguishable from the flawed logic found in the stimulus, that the failure to prove an assertion means that we can no longer make that claim (not that the assertion is conclusively proven untrue).
The distinction here comes down to the strength of the conclusion: "we can't claim an assertion," versus that assertion is definitively false."
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice, as it reflects the same flawed logic found in the stimulus: Fire officials could not definitively prove the link between the flood and the fire, so no such causal claim can be asserted. This is the same sort of flawed argumentation found in the stimulus and is therefore the correct answer.
Answer choice (E): This answer choice draws a conclusion that is much different from that drawn by the author of the stimulus. Here, based on reasonable beliefs, the author asserts that those beliefs are enough for us to narrow down the possible causes of the flood.
Parallel Flaw—CE. The correct answer choice is (D)
The flaw in the reasoning found in this stimulus is a fairly common logical flaw—the notion that failure to prove something means that we can no longer make such a claim. In truth there are many theories which have not been definitively proved but are still generally accepted. The author presents this basic argument:
We cannot prove a link between the triceratops' extinction and asteroid impact, so we cannot claim that asteroid impact was the cause.
The correct answer choice will be guilty of the same logical fallacy: the mistaken notion that a failure to prove something definitively takes away our right to assert the claim.
Answer choice (A): The reasoning here is flawed, but this choice does not parallel the flawed logic found in the stimulus. In this case, the flaw is the mistaken belief that if two people aren't each individually capable of lifting something alone, they are not capable of lifting it as a pair either. This has nothing to do with a failure to definitively prove an assertion, so this answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (B): This answer choice presents a restatement that appears to be valid, so this cannot parallel the flawed logic found in the stimulus.
Answer choice (C): This answer choice is probably, for many, the most attractive of the wrong answer choices. It starts along the right lines, pointing out that two assertions have not been conclusively proven. The conclusion here, however, is that the opposite has been conclusively proven. This is subtly distinguishable from the flawed logic found in the stimulus, that the failure to prove an assertion means that we can no longer make that claim (not that the assertion is conclusively proven untrue).
The distinction here comes down to the strength of the conclusion: "we can't claim an assertion," versus that assertion is definitively false."
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice, as it reflects the same flawed logic found in the stimulus: Fire officials could not definitively prove the link between the flood and the fire, so no such causal claim can be asserted. This is the same sort of flawed argumentation found in the stimulus and is therefore the correct answer.
Answer choice (E): This answer choice draws a conclusion that is much different from that drawn by the author of the stimulus. Here, based on reasonable beliefs, the author asserts that those beliefs are enough for us to narrow down the possible causes of the flood.