- Fri Dec 20, 2019 10:43 am
#72658
Complete Question Explanation
Flaw in the Reasoning, CE. The correct answer choice is (B).
The stimulus presents as fact that a causal relationship exists between psychological stress and two distinct effects of that stress, negative emotions and impaired physical health. From this premise of a cause having two effects, the argument concludes that reducing one of the effects should reduce the other effect, which is an invalid claim. Reducing or removing the common cause should reduce the effects, but there is no reason to believe that the effects have any causal relationship with each other.
Answer choice (A): A classic shell game of an answer, this one almost gets it right, but the problem is that it describes two causes having one combined effect, whereas the stimulus is about one cause having two effects.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. The flaw in the stimulus, as outlined above, is perfectly described in this answer. Two effects need not have any causal influence on, or relationship with, each other.
Answer choice (C): An attempt to baffle us by adding conditional language! But again we have an answer that describes two causes, when our argument is about two effects of a common cause.
Answer choice (D): Yet another answer that treats our effects (negative emotions and impaired physical health) as if they were presented to us as causes. At this point in going through the answers you might start to doubt yourself about what was the cause and what were the effects, but if you went in with a strong prephrase and confidence in yourself you should be able to keep brushing these backwards answers aside.
Answer choice (E): This answer may be the most attractive wrong answer in the bunch. It goes wrong when it treats negative emotions as a cause (" a condition that causally contributes"), because in the stimulus the premise did not treat it as a cause, but only as an effect (of psychological stress).
Every wrong answer to this question describes something that did not happen in the stimulus, and a correct Flaw answer must be an accurate description of what occurred in the stimulus. In other words, it must be true. Reject answers that incorrectly describe what happened!
Flaw in the Reasoning, CE. The correct answer choice is (B).
The stimulus presents as fact that a causal relationship exists between psychological stress and two distinct effects of that stress, negative emotions and impaired physical health. From this premise of a cause having two effects, the argument concludes that reducing one of the effects should reduce the other effect, which is an invalid claim. Reducing or removing the common cause should reduce the effects, but there is no reason to believe that the effects have any causal relationship with each other.
Answer choice (A): A classic shell game of an answer, this one almost gets it right, but the problem is that it describes two causes having one combined effect, whereas the stimulus is about one cause having two effects.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. The flaw in the stimulus, as outlined above, is perfectly described in this answer. Two effects need not have any causal influence on, or relationship with, each other.
Answer choice (C): An attempt to baffle us by adding conditional language! But again we have an answer that describes two causes, when our argument is about two effects of a common cause.
Answer choice (D): Yet another answer that treats our effects (negative emotions and impaired physical health) as if they were presented to us as causes. At this point in going through the answers you might start to doubt yourself about what was the cause and what were the effects, but if you went in with a strong prephrase and confidence in yourself you should be able to keep brushing these backwards answers aside.
Answer choice (E): This answer may be the most attractive wrong answer in the bunch. It goes wrong when it treats negative emotions as a cause (" a condition that causally contributes"), because in the stimulus the premise did not treat it as a cause, but only as an effect (of psychological stress).
Every wrong answer to this question describes something that did not happen in the stimulus, and a correct Flaw answer must be an accurate description of what occurred in the stimulus. In other words, it must be true. Reject answers that incorrectly describe what happened!