- Mon Sep 12, 2016 4:19 pm
#28538
I'll try, JS! As Clay mentioned in his prior post, the error here is one of composition, also know as a part-to-whole flaw. The author assumes that since no one single disease could be responsible for all the extinctions, then the sum total of all the new diseases could not have been to blame. He has overlooked the possibility that one disease might account for some extinctions while another disease accounts for other extinctions, and so on.
The same flaw occurs in answer B here - the author assumes that since no one person under consideration (the two roomies) is able, on their own, to repair both the window and the door, then they cannot, in combination, fix them both. Perhaps one can do the window and the other the door?
Answer choice C has no such part-to-whole flaw. There is a flaw here - perhaps they are willing to go to a restaurant that they don't like? Maybe they will head outside the immediate vicinity of the movie theater? Maybe instead of dinner they will hit a club, or go hang out in a park, or hop a freight train and ride the rails a while, hobo-style? - but it's not the same type of flaw. I would say that it's a false dilemma - the author assumes that because one choice they might make is unlikely, they have only one alternative (going home). Sure, he hedges his bets by saying they will "probably" do that, but even so, there is no real evidence that that is probable, not without more info.
I hope that helps!
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
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