- Mon Apr 18, 2016 5:26 pm
#23216
Complete Question Explanation
Parallel Reasoning-CE. The correct answer choice is (D)
This Parallel question contains cause and effect reasoning that is then shown not to be true. A purported cause is given—"flagrant violations of human rights"—and then an effect—Zeria's severing of diplomatic relations. The next premise demonstrates an example situation where the cause is present, but the effect is not. The conclusion then follows that this cause cannot be the exclusive clause. In looking for the correct answer, we can look for cause and effect reasoning that is shown to be false or incomplete.
Answer choice (A): This answer choice also contains cause and effect reasoning, but the reasoning is never attack. In the stimulus, another cause is present without the effect occurring, and that does not happen here. We do not know if, in fact, eating breakfast harms anyone's health. Unlike the stimulus, the answer never tells us whether the effect (bad for someone's health) exists or not for the parents; we just know that they almost never eat breakfast.
Answer choice (B): You can eliminate this answer almost immediately because it contains a different kind of reasoning. Professor Walsh says most handwriting is difficult to read, not all. There is no clear cause and effect reasoning here because the handwritings change.
Answer choice (C): This answer choice also contains cause and effect reasoning that is debunked, but it is done in a different way. In the stimulus, the cause is shown to be present in another example where the effect does not occur, demonstrating that it cannot be the exclusive cause of the first effect. In this example, the author is attempting to demonstrate that the cause cannot logically exist because there was food available.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. A purported cause and effect relationship is shown to be false because the author offers another example of socializing with coworkers (the same cause) that is not rejected as imprudent (a different effect).
Answer choice (E): Again, this answer contains cause and effect reasoning, but it involves a different type of reasoning. It deals with a matter of degree —"a new low"—so it is not a sound argument. Although teachers' salaries have always been low, it could be that reaching this "new low" fully explains the decline in good teachers.
Parallel Reasoning-CE. The correct answer choice is (D)
This Parallel question contains cause and effect reasoning that is then shown not to be true. A purported cause is given—"flagrant violations of human rights"—and then an effect—Zeria's severing of diplomatic relations. The next premise demonstrates an example situation where the cause is present, but the effect is not. The conclusion then follows that this cause cannot be the exclusive clause. In looking for the correct answer, we can look for cause and effect reasoning that is shown to be false or incomplete.
Answer choice (A): This answer choice also contains cause and effect reasoning, but the reasoning is never attack. In the stimulus, another cause is present without the effect occurring, and that does not happen here. We do not know if, in fact, eating breakfast harms anyone's health. Unlike the stimulus, the answer never tells us whether the effect (bad for someone's health) exists or not for the parents; we just know that they almost never eat breakfast.
Answer choice (B): You can eliminate this answer almost immediately because it contains a different kind of reasoning. Professor Walsh says most handwriting is difficult to read, not all. There is no clear cause and effect reasoning here because the handwritings change.
Answer choice (C): This answer choice also contains cause and effect reasoning that is debunked, but it is done in a different way. In the stimulus, the cause is shown to be present in another example where the effect does not occur, demonstrating that it cannot be the exclusive cause of the first effect. In this example, the author is attempting to demonstrate that the cause cannot logically exist because there was food available.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. A purported cause and effect relationship is shown to be false because the author offers another example of socializing with coworkers (the same cause) that is not rejected as imprudent (a different effect).
Answer choice (E): Again, this answer contains cause and effect reasoning, but it involves a different type of reasoning. It deals with a matter of degree —"a new low"—so it is not a sound argument. Although teachers' salaries have always been low, it could be that reaching this "new low" fully explains the decline in good teachers.