- Wed Dec 13, 2017 8:51 pm
#42416
(B) says the columnist's argument presumes that driving conditions are the same in every region, but that doesn't have to be the case for the columnists argument. If driving conditions differed but drivers in the most average condition could still get nowhere close to the manufacturers' claimed fuel economy, that would actually bolster the columnist's argument. So, since the columnist doesn't necessarily presume the sameness of driving conditions in every region, this can't be the answer. Take it in two parts:
1) Does the answer choice correctly describe what is happening in the stimulus? (i.e. Does the columnist presume what the answer choice says she does?)
2) If yes, does that presumption make the argument vulnerable to criticism?
For (A), the answer choice (1) accurately describes a feature of the columnist's argument (drawing a conclusion on a sample size that is too small, and (2) that basis does make the argument vulnerable to criticism.