- Mon Jul 31, 2023 12:23 pm
#102591
Hi Noelle,
Whenever you're considering an answer for a flaw question, it's a good idea to immediately compare the answer under consideration to the argument above (specifically the conclusion) to see whether the argument actually commits this flaw. The reason that this is so important is that many tempting wrong answers describe flaws that would be true of very similar arguments, but not exactly the argument given. (Think of these as "shell game" wrong answers, just like there are "shell game" wrong answers in other questions.)
In Answer A, for example, does the argument actually presume that increased unemployment is sufficient to abandon increased productivity as an economic goal? Does the argument even recommend abandoning the goal of increased productivity?
It may seem like that is where the argument is heading, but nowhere in the argument itself is such a recommendation actually made. The conclusion of the argument is simply that attempting to increase productivity of the whole economy may benefit business owners but will also increase the number of unemployed workers. The implications of that conclusion and any policy recommendations based on it are left unanswered.
If the argument had then gone on to conclude, "therefore we must abandon this policy," then Answer A would correctly describe a flaw that had occurred. The argument as it is written is simply bringing up a negative/drawback of the policy without going so far as to fully weigh the pros and cons.
So the word "sufficient" often is used when describing a conditional error, but it would be a mistake to rule out an answer simply because of this word. As described above, it the argument had gone further in concluding that the policy should be abandoned (presumably because the unemployment increase outweighs the productivity increase), then Answer A would have been correct even though this isn't a conditional argument. However, if an answer had stated "the argument mistakes a sufficient condition for a necessary condition," that answer should be easy to eliminate since this argument isn't conditional.
Unfortunately, the best answer is not always going to be one of the easily identifiable flaws described in "The Logical Reasoning Bible." That would be too easy! While knowing those flaws is definitely helpful, and they will be correct in some questions (like this one), the test makers have recently been using more flaws that don't nicely fit into traditional classification in order to make these questions more difficult.