- Fri Oct 12, 2018 5:25 pm
#59503
Poneil and Kithly,
This is a parallel the flawed reasoning question. As you know, there are various techniques. The most mechanical technique is to match up argument parts. I prefer to begin with a more general approach, since the hypermechanical approach is time consuming.The hypermechanical approach may also lead to confusion, since there are multiple flaws in this stimulus, and the right answer only parallels one of them. Poneil, you are absolutely correct that the right answer choice makes no attempt to parallel the last sentence of the stimulus, so the mechanical approach would lead to confusion.
Reading through the stimulus, my reaction was that they didn't have to use the same amount of aspartame. Also, maybe people who drink aspartame decide it is gross rather than learning to like it. So I will look for that in the choices.
(A) Stimulus was not about changing preferences. Wrong.
(B) Stimulus was about switching between alternatives, not a mixture. Wrong.
(C) I am keeping this because whose bank is bigger? Could be the same kind of "amounts" mixup.
(D) I am keeping this because the stimulus did assert why people would have different preferences.
(E) Stimulus did not involve an individual's perceptions about other people. Wrong.
Okay, we're on a good track, down to two choices. What now?
(C) This is the same kind of mixup as the stimulus, because drinks with aspartame might have less sweetener, just like the piggy bank with nickels might have fewer coins.
(D) This is different from the stimulus. The stimulus assumes that people who drink aspartame are definitely getting more sweetener. So to be parallel, (D) should say that Stephanie during her life has had more hot days than Katherine did, rather than just create a possibility. Also, the stimulus indicates that an Individual who drinks aspartame will like sweeter things more than less sweet things, without comparing that Individual to anyone else. So to be right, the stimulus should say that Stephanie had more hot days than cooler days, and should not compare her to anyone else.
So, that's how I would approach this. Quick pass to focus on the general types of flaws that occurred, and then a more detailed comparison to tell which remaining choice is the best match to the stimulus.