- Sat May 14, 2016 12:34 pm
#24816
Complete Question Explanation
Flaw in the Reasoning. The correct answer choice is (E)
Smith’s argument is noticeably weak:
Doctors know a lot about health. Doctors eat meat. Therefore meat must be healthy. The flawed logic in this case is the presumption that the doctors’ knowledge about what is healthy would translate to their actions. Since some doctors do not lead healthy lifestyles, they are not all ideal role models.
The question stem requires that we find the choice which best reflects this flawed reasoning. Only correct answer choice (E) does so; Smith presumes that doctors will not do anything contrary to what they know to be healthy.
Answer choice (C) refers to a flaw called "circular reasoning." Basically, that occurs when the author assumes their conclusion is true when they are trying to support it. For example: "I must be telling the truth because I'm not lying." In this argument the conclusion ("I must be telling the truth") and the premise ("I'm not lying") are the same! The author is basically just going in circles without providing actual support for anything.
Answer choices that describe circular reasoning are very common on the LSAT, and they are frequently incorrect. The test makers like to throw them in there because they know they confuse test takers and can be attractive when you're unsure what they actual flaw is. So make sure that before you choose an answer choice that describes circular reasoning, that you truly have circular reasoning in your stimulus!
Flaw in the Reasoning. The correct answer choice is (E)
Smith’s argument is noticeably weak:
Doctors know a lot about health. Doctors eat meat. Therefore meat must be healthy. The flawed logic in this case is the presumption that the doctors’ knowledge about what is healthy would translate to their actions. Since some doctors do not lead healthy lifestyles, they are not all ideal role models.
The question stem requires that we find the choice which best reflects this flawed reasoning. Only correct answer choice (E) does so; Smith presumes that doctors will not do anything contrary to what they know to be healthy.
Answer choice (C) refers to a flaw called "circular reasoning." Basically, that occurs when the author assumes their conclusion is true when they are trying to support it. For example: "I must be telling the truth because I'm not lying." In this argument the conclusion ("I must be telling the truth") and the premise ("I'm not lying") are the same! The author is basically just going in circles without providing actual support for anything.
Answer choices that describe circular reasoning are very common on the LSAT, and they are frequently incorrect. The test makers like to throw them in there because they know they confuse test takers and can be attractive when you're unsure what they actual flaw is. So make sure that before you choose an answer choice that describes circular reasoning, that you truly have circular reasoning in your stimulus!