- Thu Jan 21, 2016 12:00 am
#73119
Complete Question Explanation
Resolve the Paradox. The correct answer choice is (B).
In this Resolve the Paradox scenario we learn that while people are generally interested in and moved by anecdotes, which are not representative stories, rather than paying attention to statistics, they somehow manage to form accurate beliefs about society. What could explain this? How can we get accurate beliefs from listening to unrepresentative (so generally in accurate) stories?
The answer must be that people are not forming their beliefs based on those stories. Those beliefs must be coming from somewhere else, such as paying attention to the world around us and filtering those stories through our experiences and other, more reliable sources of information. Look for an answer that indicates that anecdotes are not the basis for our beliefs about society.
Answer choice (A): This answer undermines the value of statistical information for learning about individual characteristics, which tells us nothing about whether we are basing our beliefs on anecdotes or on some other sources of information. If anything this clouds the issue by making it unclear whether statistics, to which we pay little attention, would be valuable even to the extent that we did pay attention.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. If answer B is correct, then it makes at least some sense that we are not forming our beliefs based on anecdotes. Knowing that they are unrepresentative means we are not likely to rely upon them to form a general belief system, so we must be getting our more reliable information elsewhere.
Answer choice (C): Answer C appears to deepen the paradox, rather than resolve it. If more compelling anecdotes change our beliefs, and if those anecdotes are not representative of reality, then how have we managed to form generally accurate beliefs? There is no help here, so this is an incorrect answer choice.
Answer choice (D): While it might be nice to be able to use anecdotes to help make sense of statistics, the fact remains that anecdotes are unrepresentative and we aren't paying attention to statistics, so this answer should leave us still wondering how we managed to form accurate beliefs about society. This answer offers no resolution to that problem.
Answer choice (E): As with answer C, this answer makes the problem worse rather than resolving it. Anecdotes elicit emotional responses, and if that influences our beliefs, then how did we ever manage to form accurate beliefs? Also, this answer shifts terms from "beliefs about society" to "beliefs about other people," and so takes us away from the problem we are trying to solve.
Resolve the Paradox. The correct answer choice is (B).
In this Resolve the Paradox scenario we learn that while people are generally interested in and moved by anecdotes, which are not representative stories, rather than paying attention to statistics, they somehow manage to form accurate beliefs about society. What could explain this? How can we get accurate beliefs from listening to unrepresentative (so generally in accurate) stories?
The answer must be that people are not forming their beliefs based on those stories. Those beliefs must be coming from somewhere else, such as paying attention to the world around us and filtering those stories through our experiences and other, more reliable sources of information. Look for an answer that indicates that anecdotes are not the basis for our beliefs about society.
Answer choice (A): This answer undermines the value of statistical information for learning about individual characteristics, which tells us nothing about whether we are basing our beliefs on anecdotes or on some other sources of information. If anything this clouds the issue by making it unclear whether statistics, to which we pay little attention, would be valuable even to the extent that we did pay attention.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. If answer B is correct, then it makes at least some sense that we are not forming our beliefs based on anecdotes. Knowing that they are unrepresentative means we are not likely to rely upon them to form a general belief system, so we must be getting our more reliable information elsewhere.
Answer choice (C): Answer C appears to deepen the paradox, rather than resolve it. If more compelling anecdotes change our beliefs, and if those anecdotes are not representative of reality, then how have we managed to form generally accurate beliefs? There is no help here, so this is an incorrect answer choice.
Answer choice (D): While it might be nice to be able to use anecdotes to help make sense of statistics, the fact remains that anecdotes are unrepresentative and we aren't paying attention to statistics, so this answer should leave us still wondering how we managed to form accurate beliefs about society. This answer offers no resolution to that problem.
Answer choice (E): As with answer C, this answer makes the problem worse rather than resolving it. Anecdotes elicit emotional responses, and if that influences our beliefs, then how did we ever manage to form accurate beliefs? Also, this answer shifts terms from "beliefs about society" to "beliefs about other people," and so takes us away from the problem we are trying to solve.