- Tue May 31, 2016 6:03 pm
#25854
Complete Question Explanation
Flaw in the Reasoning. The correct answer choice is (B)
This question provides a great example of why the length of a stimulus does not necessarily correlate to the difficulty of the argument contained within it. The question stem tells you that this is a Flaw question, and focuses you in on the flaw in the astronomer’s argument. While LSAC used many words to slow you down, the astronomer essentially argues that Professor Tagar cannot be correct because he does not accept the view of two other biologists. The astronomer’s sole premise is that “Tagar does not accept the views of biologists Swiderski and Terrada, who maintain that Martian bacteria would shrink to one-tenth of 1 percent of their normal volume when water or other nutrients were in short supply.” The astronomer provides no other support for the conclusion that “Tagar’s view cannot be right.”
Your prephrase is that the correct answer choice will describe the astronomer accepting the view of the two biologists over that of Tagar. Although you might be tempted to think that because the astronomer chooses the two biologists over the solitary voice of Tagar that this is an appeal to numbers flaw. However, the argument makes no reference to the numbers idea, and so that is unlikely to be the correct answer. Instead, your prephrase should focus on the lack of any support for the astronomer’s preference.
Answer choice (A): This choice is incorrect because the astronomer’s argument makes no reference to the consistency of the views held by the biologists. This choice is a type of source argument, in which the inconsistency in a person’s view is held out as evidence that their more recent view is incorrect.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. This choice points to the lack of evidence to support the astronomer’s implicit preference for the view of Swiderski and Terrada over that of Tagar.
Answer choice (C): This choice is incorrect, because the astronomer makes no mention of the difference in number, and an appeal to numbers is not inherently the basis of his conclusion.
Answer choice (D): This choice describes an internally inconsistent argument, which was not present in the stimulus.
Answer choice (E): This choice describes the opposite of what was present in the stimulus, in which the astronomer preferred the opinion of two apparent experts over that of another.
Flaw in the Reasoning. The correct answer choice is (B)
This question provides a great example of why the length of a stimulus does not necessarily correlate to the difficulty of the argument contained within it. The question stem tells you that this is a Flaw question, and focuses you in on the flaw in the astronomer’s argument. While LSAC used many words to slow you down, the astronomer essentially argues that Professor Tagar cannot be correct because he does not accept the view of two other biologists. The astronomer’s sole premise is that “Tagar does not accept the views of biologists Swiderski and Terrada, who maintain that Martian bacteria would shrink to one-tenth of 1 percent of their normal volume when water or other nutrients were in short supply.” The astronomer provides no other support for the conclusion that “Tagar’s view cannot be right.”
Your prephrase is that the correct answer choice will describe the astronomer accepting the view of the two biologists over that of Tagar. Although you might be tempted to think that because the astronomer chooses the two biologists over the solitary voice of Tagar that this is an appeal to numbers flaw. However, the argument makes no reference to the numbers idea, and so that is unlikely to be the correct answer. Instead, your prephrase should focus on the lack of any support for the astronomer’s preference.
Answer choice (A): This choice is incorrect because the astronomer’s argument makes no reference to the consistency of the views held by the biologists. This choice is a type of source argument, in which the inconsistency in a person’s view is held out as evidence that their more recent view is incorrect.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. This choice points to the lack of evidence to support the astronomer’s implicit preference for the view of Swiderski and Terrada over that of Tagar.
Answer choice (C): This choice is incorrect, because the astronomer makes no mention of the difference in number, and an appeal to numbers is not inherently the basis of his conclusion.
Answer choice (D): This choice describes an internally inconsistent argument, which was not present in the stimulus.
Answer choice (E): This choice describes the opposite of what was present in the stimulus, in which the astronomer preferred the opinion of two apparent experts over that of another.