- Fri Jan 21, 2011 12:00 am
#74629
Complete Question Explanation
Flaw in the Reasoning. The correct answer choice is A.
The columnist makes a claim about causal uncertainty in the aggregate sense, arguing that it is impossible to know whether lax standards contributed to the aggregate rise in cancer rates near nuclear reactors. This claim is made based on the uncertainty that exists about causation of individual cases of cancer. The columnist ignores that sometimes it is possible to make aggregate inferences about causation from statistical models that do not require absolute certainty about single/individual instances of causation. This is our prephrase.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice. Answer choice A fits our prephrase and perfectly encapsulates the problem with making a claim about aggregate causal uncertainty (which can be overcome to some extent using statistical data and modeling) from a premise about causal uncertainty in individual instances (which is, in many cases, difficult to overcome).
Answer choice (B): Answer choice B describes a different kind of causal error than the stimulus exhibits. It describes the error of inferring there is a causal relationship between two things simply because one event happens after another event (i.e., "what follows a certain phenomenon"). Since this argument does not infer a causal relationship, and does not discuss the sequence of events, this cannot be an accurate description.
Answer choice (C): Answer choice C describes an overgeneralization, taking evidence drawn from a "particular" (i.e. single) case of cancer and using that specific evidence to infer something about cancer cases in general. Although it's true that the premise of the argument uses the language "a particular case of cancer," the argument's speaker only uses that language to make a general observation that applies to any particular cancer case (that we never know what caused any particular case). What answer choice C describes is something more specific: evidence "drawn from" a specific case of cancer. If the author had looked at one individual's cancer case and taken evidence from that case to apply to a more general scenario, then answer choice C would be correct. Since the author did not actually use evidence from an individual case of cancer, this answer choice cannot be correct.
Answer choice (D): Ignoring alternate causes is only a problem where an argument makes a positive assertion that one specific thing was in fact the cause of an effect. Here, the author does not conclude that lax standards were the cause of higher rates of cancer near nuclear reactors (if the author had done that, then alternate causes would be a problem for the argument). Rather, the author concludes that we cannot know whether lax standards were such a cause. So answer choice D does not refer to something that makes the argument vulnerable to criticism.
Answer choice (E): Answer choice E describes one form of evidence error--concluding that someone's claim is false, because they have not presented evidence supporting that claim. That description is not accurate here, because the author does not make a conclusion that a claim is false. Rather than concluding a claim is false, the author concludes that it would be impossible for real evidence of a causal claim to exist. Thus, answer choice E inaccurately describes the argument and is incorrect.
Flaw in the Reasoning. The correct answer choice is A.
The columnist makes a claim about causal uncertainty in the aggregate sense, arguing that it is impossible to know whether lax standards contributed to the aggregate rise in cancer rates near nuclear reactors. This claim is made based on the uncertainty that exists about causation of individual cases of cancer. The columnist ignores that sometimes it is possible to make aggregate inferences about causation from statistical models that do not require absolute certainty about single/individual instances of causation. This is our prephrase.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice. Answer choice A fits our prephrase and perfectly encapsulates the problem with making a claim about aggregate causal uncertainty (which can be overcome to some extent using statistical data and modeling) from a premise about causal uncertainty in individual instances (which is, in many cases, difficult to overcome).
Answer choice (B): Answer choice B describes a different kind of causal error than the stimulus exhibits. It describes the error of inferring there is a causal relationship between two things simply because one event happens after another event (i.e., "what follows a certain phenomenon"). Since this argument does not infer a causal relationship, and does not discuss the sequence of events, this cannot be an accurate description.
Answer choice (C): Answer choice C describes an overgeneralization, taking evidence drawn from a "particular" (i.e. single) case of cancer and using that specific evidence to infer something about cancer cases in general. Although it's true that the premise of the argument uses the language "a particular case of cancer," the argument's speaker only uses that language to make a general observation that applies to any particular cancer case (that we never know what caused any particular case). What answer choice C describes is something more specific: evidence "drawn from" a specific case of cancer. If the author had looked at one individual's cancer case and taken evidence from that case to apply to a more general scenario, then answer choice C would be correct. Since the author did not actually use evidence from an individual case of cancer, this answer choice cannot be correct.
Answer choice (D): Ignoring alternate causes is only a problem where an argument makes a positive assertion that one specific thing was in fact the cause of an effect. Here, the author does not conclude that lax standards were the cause of higher rates of cancer near nuclear reactors (if the author had done that, then alternate causes would be a problem for the argument). Rather, the author concludes that we cannot know whether lax standards were such a cause. So answer choice D does not refer to something that makes the argument vulnerable to criticism.
Answer choice (E): Answer choice E describes one form of evidence error--concluding that someone's claim is false, because they have not presented evidence supporting that claim. That description is not accurate here, because the author does not make a conclusion that a claim is false. Rather than concluding a claim is false, the author concludes that it would be impossible for real evidence of a causal claim to exist. Thus, answer choice E inaccurately describes the argument and is incorrect.