- Wed May 10, 2017 1:01 pm
#34686
Complete Question Explanation
Flaw in the Reasoning—CE. The correct answer choice is (E)
Moore’s argument considers how well sunscreen lotions block ultraviolet radiation, a cause of skin cancer. According to the many scientific studies Moore references, people who consistently use sunscreen get as many skin cancers as those people who use sunscreen rarely, if at all.
The problem with Moore’s argument is that it does not provide us with enough information about the people who were the subjects of the study. What is their biological predisposition to developing skin cancer? Where do they live? How much time do they spend in the sun? All of these questions point to the concern that we have with all causal arguments on the LSAT: the stimulus authors assume there is just one potential cause for each effect. Bolstering our view of this error is that we already know that there is a behavioral difference between the people mentioned in the stimulus. Why is it that some of the people use sunscreen regularly while the others do not? We cannot simply assume that these people are exactly the same in every other way that is relevant to the conclusion, but that is what the author of the stimulus appears to do.
This is a Flaw in the Reasoning question. Our prephrase is that the correct answer choice will describe the author’s assumption that there is nothing besides the poor performance of sunscreen lotions that causes the difference in the occurrence of skin cancer described in the stimulus.
Answer choice (A): The argument does not take other possible health benefits of sunscreen lotion for granted. We know this because other potential health benefits of the lotion are irrelevant to the conclusion.
Answer choice (B): There is no indication from the stimulus that it is necessary to distinguish between the number of cases and the severity of those cases. The occurrence of skin cancer at all, if caused by exposure to ultraviolet radiation, would indicate that the radiation was not blocked by the sunscreen lotion.
Answer choice (C): Those sunscreen lotions that are not designed to block ultraviolet radiation are irrelevant to the conclusion.
Answer choice (D): This answer choice is incorrect because there is no reason to think that evidence relied on by Moore would be impossible to challenge.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice because it points out that Moore has failed to address a possible alternate cause for the development of skin cancer suggested by the stimulus: perhaps the people who do not wear sunscreen lotions as frequently do not need the same level of protection because they do not go out into the sun as frequently as those who wear sunscreen lotion more often. If they do not go out into the sun as frequently, then they would have a lower risk of developing skin cancer caused by exposure to ultraviolet radiation, with or without the benefit of sunscreen lotion.
Flaw in the Reasoning—CE. The correct answer choice is (E)
Moore’s argument considers how well sunscreen lotions block ultraviolet radiation, a cause of skin cancer. According to the many scientific studies Moore references, people who consistently use sunscreen get as many skin cancers as those people who use sunscreen rarely, if at all.
The problem with Moore’s argument is that it does not provide us with enough information about the people who were the subjects of the study. What is their biological predisposition to developing skin cancer? Where do they live? How much time do they spend in the sun? All of these questions point to the concern that we have with all causal arguments on the LSAT: the stimulus authors assume there is just one potential cause for each effect. Bolstering our view of this error is that we already know that there is a behavioral difference between the people mentioned in the stimulus. Why is it that some of the people use sunscreen regularly while the others do not? We cannot simply assume that these people are exactly the same in every other way that is relevant to the conclusion, but that is what the author of the stimulus appears to do.
This is a Flaw in the Reasoning question. Our prephrase is that the correct answer choice will describe the author’s assumption that there is nothing besides the poor performance of sunscreen lotions that causes the difference in the occurrence of skin cancer described in the stimulus.
Answer choice (A): The argument does not take other possible health benefits of sunscreen lotion for granted. We know this because other potential health benefits of the lotion are irrelevant to the conclusion.
Answer choice (B): There is no indication from the stimulus that it is necessary to distinguish between the number of cases and the severity of those cases. The occurrence of skin cancer at all, if caused by exposure to ultraviolet radiation, would indicate that the radiation was not blocked by the sunscreen lotion.
Answer choice (C): Those sunscreen lotions that are not designed to block ultraviolet radiation are irrelevant to the conclusion.
Answer choice (D): This answer choice is incorrect because there is no reason to think that evidence relied on by Moore would be impossible to challenge.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice because it points out that Moore has failed to address a possible alternate cause for the development of skin cancer suggested by the stimulus: perhaps the people who do not wear sunscreen lotions as frequently do not need the same level of protection because they do not go out into the sun as frequently as those who wear sunscreen lotion more often. If they do not go out into the sun as frequently, then they would have a lower risk of developing skin cancer caused by exposure to ultraviolet radiation, with or without the benefit of sunscreen lotion.