- Fri Sep 14, 2018 7:28 pm
#58016
dystopia,
I understand that you discarded Answer Choice (B) because you did not believe that Carrillo's claim that his statistical model "strongly supports" a conclusion means that he believes his statistical model is reliable. The question stem asks you to rely on the dialog as your evidence in determining the point of disagreement between Carrillo and Olson. Since it is not typical that people claim their models "strongly support" a conclusion while harboring the belief that their models are actually unreliable, you should not discard Answer Choice (B), especially when Olson has directly claimed that the model is pure speculation.
I understand that you are making a distinction between believing that a model supports a conclusion and believing that a model is reliable. However, there is not "no evidence that Carrillo believes his model is reliable," because a claim about the inferential power of a model is properly read as a claim about its reliability. You are reading his claim that his model "strongly supports" a conclusion very narrowly to eliminate Answer Choice (B), so the issue is overly narrow reading rather than a lack of evidence for Answer Choice (B).
But the important question is how to avoid this scenario. In this case, remember that you are separating answers into contenders and losers. Carrillo said "my model proves X," and Olsen said "that's speculation." An answer choice that says they disagree about the reliability of the model should stay, as a strong contender.