- Mon Feb 27, 2017 12:56 pm
#33149
Complete Question Explanation
Weaken—CE. The correct answer choice is (D)
This stimulus presents a causal conclusion in which the stimulus author chooses (poorly) between two potential causes for a candidate’s election win.
Last year there was a televised political debate between Lopez and Tanner. Viewers surveyed immediately after the debate tended to think that Lopez had made the better argument, and Lopez later won the election. The stimulus author treats the fact that Lopez won the election as evidence that the survey respondents who reported favoring Lopez’s debate arguments did so because they were biased in Lopez’s favor.
This conclusion is causal and, like all causal conclusions in the Logical Reasoning section, it is flawed. The author considers the bias in Lopez’s favor to be a cause that led to at least two results: the survey responses and the election result.
Answer choice (A): The fact that most people who voted in the election did not watch the debate is irrelevant to the conclusion, because the conclusion was limited to the issue of whether some of those who did watch the debate were biased in favor of Lopez.
Answer choice (B): This information is not relevant to the conclusion, which considered only that those respondents who reported that Lopez’s arguments were more persuasive may have been biased in favor of Lopez.
Answer choice (C): This answer choice is incorrect, because the likelihood of those who watched the televised debate to vote for Tanner rather than Lopez is not relevant to the question of whether those respondents who stated that Lopez was more persuasive responded the way they did because of bias.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. The evidence in the stimulus established that the debate viewers surveyed immediately after the debate tended to think Lopez had made better arguments. The argument concludes that those who responded favorably for Lopez did so because they were biased in favor of Lopez. However, if it is the case that most of the viewers surveyed prior to the debate said they would probably vote for Tanner, Lopez’s opponent, then this casts some doubt on the conclusion that the survey respondents answered the way they did because of a bias toward Lopez. This answer choice does not prove that the respondents at issue were not biased toward Lopez, but it does cast some doubt on the conclusion.
Answer choice (E): The margin of Lopez’s victory has no relevance to the question of whether the survey respondents who said Lopez’s arguments were better during the televised debate were biased in his favor.
Weaken—CE. The correct answer choice is (D)
This stimulus presents a causal conclusion in which the stimulus author chooses (poorly) between two potential causes for a candidate’s election win.
Last year there was a televised political debate between Lopez and Tanner. Viewers surveyed immediately after the debate tended to think that Lopez had made the better argument, and Lopez later won the election. The stimulus author treats the fact that Lopez won the election as evidence that the survey respondents who reported favoring Lopez’s debate arguments did so because they were biased in Lopez’s favor.
This conclusion is causal and, like all causal conclusions in the Logical Reasoning section, it is flawed. The author considers the bias in Lopez’s favor to be a cause that led to at least two results: the survey responses and the election result.
- C E
survey result
bias +
election result
Answer choice (A): The fact that most people who voted in the election did not watch the debate is irrelevant to the conclusion, because the conclusion was limited to the issue of whether some of those who did watch the debate were biased in favor of Lopez.
Answer choice (B): This information is not relevant to the conclusion, which considered only that those respondents who reported that Lopez’s arguments were more persuasive may have been biased in favor of Lopez.
Answer choice (C): This answer choice is incorrect, because the likelihood of those who watched the televised debate to vote for Tanner rather than Lopez is not relevant to the question of whether those respondents who stated that Lopez was more persuasive responded the way they did because of bias.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. The evidence in the stimulus established that the debate viewers surveyed immediately after the debate tended to think Lopez had made better arguments. The argument concludes that those who responded favorably for Lopez did so because they were biased in favor of Lopez. However, if it is the case that most of the viewers surveyed prior to the debate said they would probably vote for Tanner, Lopez’s opponent, then this casts some doubt on the conclusion that the survey respondents answered the way they did because of a bias toward Lopez. This answer choice does not prove that the respondents at issue were not biased toward Lopez, but it does cast some doubt on the conclusion.
Answer choice (E): The margin of Lopez’s victory has no relevance to the question of whether the survey respondents who said Lopez’s arguments were better during the televised debate were biased in his favor.