- Wed Jan 21, 2015 12:00 am
#73291
Complete Question Explanation
Flaw in the Reasoning. The correct answer choice is (D).
The presence of conditional reasoning might lead you to suspect that there is a Mistaken Reversal or Mistaken Negation present, but there is no such conditional flaw. Instead, we see a somewhat rare Time Shift error, in which the author uses evidence about what has happened so far (economists have always failed at accurately predicting global recessions) as if it proves that the same thing will always be true (they never will be able to accurately predict those recessions).
Accepting the conditional premise, we get that prevention requires prediction:
Prevent Recession Predict Recession
The conclusion that we will never be able to prevent them would be valid if we knew that we could never accurately predict them. That would be a valid contrapositive. But because the evidence is based only on the past and present, and fails to account for possible changes in the future, the conclusion is flawed. The conditional relationship is interpreted correctly, but the evidence of the past is treated as if it is also evidence of the future, the essence of a Time Shift.
Answer choice (A): A description of circular reasoning, which did not occur in the stimulus. Never pick this answer if the author actually provided any evidence to support their claim, even if that evidence is bad.
Answer choice (B): It is irrelevant what economists claim - they might agree with the author that prevention is not possible, or they might disagree and claim that they can do it. The problem is the author's use of evidence of past performance to predict future results.
Answer choice (C): This answer uses "required" and "assures," synonyms for Necessary and Sufficient, and describes a Mistaken Reversal. As discussed above, while there is a conditional premise, the flaw is not based on conditional reasoning, and this answer is a very attractive loser.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. This correct answer points out the possibility, overlooked by the author, that things could change in the future.
Answer choice (E): A misstatement of the facts in the stimulus, this answer describes something that did not happen in the argument. The author did not at any point claim, or even imply, that because a recession cannot be predicted, a recession cannot actually happen. Quite the opposite, really - the author seems convinced that recessions WILL occur but will not be accurately predicted.
Flaw in the Reasoning. The correct answer choice is (D).
The presence of conditional reasoning might lead you to suspect that there is a Mistaken Reversal or Mistaken Negation present, but there is no such conditional flaw. Instead, we see a somewhat rare Time Shift error, in which the author uses evidence about what has happened so far (economists have always failed at accurately predicting global recessions) as if it proves that the same thing will always be true (they never will be able to accurately predict those recessions).
Accepting the conditional premise, we get that prevention requires prediction:
Prevent Recession Predict Recession
The conclusion that we will never be able to prevent them would be valid if we knew that we could never accurately predict them. That would be a valid contrapositive. But because the evidence is based only on the past and present, and fails to account for possible changes in the future, the conclusion is flawed. The conditional relationship is interpreted correctly, but the evidence of the past is treated as if it is also evidence of the future, the essence of a Time Shift.
Answer choice (A): A description of circular reasoning, which did not occur in the stimulus. Never pick this answer if the author actually provided any evidence to support their claim, even if that evidence is bad.
Answer choice (B): It is irrelevant what economists claim - they might agree with the author that prevention is not possible, or they might disagree and claim that they can do it. The problem is the author's use of evidence of past performance to predict future results.
Answer choice (C): This answer uses "required" and "assures," synonyms for Necessary and Sufficient, and describes a Mistaken Reversal. As discussed above, while there is a conditional premise, the flaw is not based on conditional reasoning, and this answer is a very attractive loser.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. This correct answer points out the possibility, overlooked by the author, that things could change in the future.
Answer choice (E): A misstatement of the facts in the stimulus, this answer describes something that did not happen in the argument. The author did not at any point claim, or even imply, that because a recession cannot be predicted, a recession cannot actually happen. Quite the opposite, really - the author seems convinced that recessions WILL occur but will not be accurately predicted.