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- Sat Apr 15, 2017 12:16 pm
#34129
Complete Question Explanation
Flaw. The correct answer choice is (C).
The argument opens by claiming (drawing a conclusion) that the pharaoh Akhenaten as well-loved during his lifetime. What is the evidence (premises) for this claim? That documented reports from his palace guards show fierce loyalty.
The question you are asked is a Flaw in the Reasoning, and this can be an easy flaw to miss. However, watch how the terms shift in the argument: "well loved and highly respected by his subjects" is supported by "fierce loyalty shown to him by his palace guards." These groups are not the same, and this is the easiest way to see that there might be an issue with the argument.
So, what is the problem? Consider for a moment the nature of palace guards. They serve the pharaoh, and rely on him for their jobs. They likely benefit from the status of serving the pharaoh and possibly (likely) lead improved lives due to their jobs. The fact that they would show fierce loyalty is then no surprise. And of course, this expected fierce loyalty does not by itself prove the general population also loved Akhenaten.
In logical terms, they looked at a very specific group of people that was likely to be unrepresentative, and then used the views of this group to make a broader claim, which is then questionable.
Answer choice (A): The premise used does not contradict the conclusion, it just doesn't fully prove it.
Answer choice (B): As noted by Jeremy Press below, "Since answer choice B refers to the evidence that the argument relies on, let's look at that evidence. The evidence of the subjects' love and respect for Akhenaten comes from "reports written during Akhenaten's reign" of the loyalty his guards showed him. That evidence is not "in principle ... impossible to challenge," which is why answer choice B is wrong. Why is that evidence not impossible to challenge? Many possible reasons: we might look at those reports and ask who wrote them and what their motives were. We could use those motives to "challenge" whether the reports provide an accurate account of the palace guards' loyalty. We could also look at the reports and try to determine if what they say is unambiguous. Maybe there's another interpretation we could give to the words of the reports, or maybe the reports document other attitudes of the guards. Thus, the type of evidence the argument relies on (written evidence in reports) is, by its nature, always possible to challenge."
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice. As discussed above, the premise isn't necessarily representative, and thus one cannot reliably make a broader claim based on that sample.
Answer choice (D): No, the term "ancient" does not play a key role in the argument. "Ancient" is referring to something that happened long ago, and everything discussed is from that same time period.
Answer choice (E): This answer could be referring to the idea of "loyalty," but there doesn't seem to be any inconsistency in how that is being used. If it refers to using reports as evidence of a viewpoint, again there no inconsistency or time-change problem with that as described.
Flaw. The correct answer choice is (C).
The argument opens by claiming (drawing a conclusion) that the pharaoh Akhenaten as well-loved during his lifetime. What is the evidence (premises) for this claim? That documented reports from his palace guards show fierce loyalty.
The question you are asked is a Flaw in the Reasoning, and this can be an easy flaw to miss. However, watch how the terms shift in the argument: "well loved and highly respected by his subjects" is supported by "fierce loyalty shown to him by his palace guards." These groups are not the same, and this is the easiest way to see that there might be an issue with the argument.
So, what is the problem? Consider for a moment the nature of palace guards. They serve the pharaoh, and rely on him for their jobs. They likely benefit from the status of serving the pharaoh and possibly (likely) lead improved lives due to their jobs. The fact that they would show fierce loyalty is then no surprise. And of course, this expected fierce loyalty does not by itself prove the general population also loved Akhenaten.
In logical terms, they looked at a very specific group of people that was likely to be unrepresentative, and then used the views of this group to make a broader claim, which is then questionable.
Answer choice (A): The premise used does not contradict the conclusion, it just doesn't fully prove it.
Answer choice (B): As noted by Jeremy Press below, "Since answer choice B refers to the evidence that the argument relies on, let's look at that evidence. The evidence of the subjects' love and respect for Akhenaten comes from "reports written during Akhenaten's reign" of the loyalty his guards showed him. That evidence is not "in principle ... impossible to challenge," which is why answer choice B is wrong. Why is that evidence not impossible to challenge? Many possible reasons: we might look at those reports and ask who wrote them and what their motives were. We could use those motives to "challenge" whether the reports provide an accurate account of the palace guards' loyalty. We could also look at the reports and try to determine if what they say is unambiguous. Maybe there's another interpretation we could give to the words of the reports, or maybe the reports document other attitudes of the guards. Thus, the type of evidence the argument relies on (written evidence in reports) is, by its nature, always possible to challenge."
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice. As discussed above, the premise isn't necessarily representative, and thus one cannot reliably make a broader claim based on that sample.
Answer choice (D): No, the term "ancient" does not play a key role in the argument. "Ancient" is referring to something that happened long ago, and everything discussed is from that same time period.
Answer choice (E): This answer could be referring to the idea of "loyalty," but there doesn't seem to be any inconsistency in how that is being used. If it refers to using reports as evidence of a viewpoint, again there no inconsistency or time-change problem with that as described.
Dave Killoran
PowerScore Test Preparation
Follow me on X/Twitter at http://twitter.com/DaveKilloran
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PowerScore Test Preparation
Follow me on X/Twitter at http://twitter.com/DaveKilloran
My LSAT Articles: http://blog.powerscore.com/lsat/author/dave-killoran
PowerScore Podcast: http://www.powerscore.com/lsat/podcast/