- Fri Dec 20, 2019 11:42 am
#72685
Complete Question Explanation
Flaw in the Reasoning, CE. The correct answer choice is (D).
The candidate used information about a strong correlation in one part of their district, one that has held steady for 10 years. Voters there, and nowhere else, seem to vote overwhelmingly for the candidates who favor property tax reform. In the rest of the district, there is no correlation between that issue and how people vote - not a positive one and not a negative one either. From this data the author concludes that favoring property tax reform will get them more votes in that area without losing them votes elsewhere.
The problem is that the argument presumes the correlation indicates a causal relationship, when of course correlation never proves causation. There could be other explanations for that correlation. Prephrase the answer to this Flaw in the Reasoning question with "it's a causal flaw" and you will have no trouble selecting the correct answer!
Answer choice (A): There is no reason to believe that the candidate would not do what they say, and even if they did not follow through on their campaign promises the argument is only about what would get them more votes. This is not a relevant issue and so is not a flaw.
Answer choice (B): The argument did not draw opposite conclusions, but drew a single, consistent conclusion that taking this position would increase votes in one area without alienating voters elsewhere.
Answer choice (C): Be careful, this is a trap answer! The argument drew a conclusion about the voters of the district based on data about the voters of the district, including data about "a significant majority" in one area and no discernable pattern everywhere else. That is entirely representative of the district, and so it is not too small a sample!
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. As described above, the flaw here is causal. There could be some other cause for the voters in the northeastern part of the district voting the way they did, and the author should have considered other possible causes rather than assuming a causal relationship based only on a correlation.
Answer choice (E): This answer is not true. The data is not 10 years old, but is current data about each of the last 10 years.
Flaw in the Reasoning, CE. The correct answer choice is (D).
The candidate used information about a strong correlation in one part of their district, one that has held steady for 10 years. Voters there, and nowhere else, seem to vote overwhelmingly for the candidates who favor property tax reform. In the rest of the district, there is no correlation between that issue and how people vote - not a positive one and not a negative one either. From this data the author concludes that favoring property tax reform will get them more votes in that area without losing them votes elsewhere.
The problem is that the argument presumes the correlation indicates a causal relationship, when of course correlation never proves causation. There could be other explanations for that correlation. Prephrase the answer to this Flaw in the Reasoning question with "it's a causal flaw" and you will have no trouble selecting the correct answer!
Answer choice (A): There is no reason to believe that the candidate would not do what they say, and even if they did not follow through on their campaign promises the argument is only about what would get them more votes. This is not a relevant issue and so is not a flaw.
Answer choice (B): The argument did not draw opposite conclusions, but drew a single, consistent conclusion that taking this position would increase votes in one area without alienating voters elsewhere.
Answer choice (C): Be careful, this is a trap answer! The argument drew a conclusion about the voters of the district based on data about the voters of the district, including data about "a significant majority" in one area and no discernable pattern everywhere else. That is entirely representative of the district, and so it is not too small a sample!
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. As described above, the flaw here is causal. There could be some other cause for the voters in the northeastern part of the district voting the way they did, and the author should have considered other possible causes rather than assuming a causal relationship based only on a correlation.
Answer choice (E): This answer is not true. The data is not 10 years old, but is current data about each of the last 10 years.