- Fri May 19, 2017 6:24 pm
#35151
Complete Question Explanation
Method of Reasoning—SN. The correct answer choice is (A)
Your task in this Method of Reasoning question is to the select the answer that provides the best
description of the economist’s response to the critic. The critic labels the economist’s last year’s
forecast as bumbling, alleging that although the economist predicted the country would soon go into
recession if the current economic policies were not changed, economic growth was even stronger this
year.
The economist responds by stating his forecast was not bumbling, and that it in fact convinced the
country’s leaders to change economic policies, preventing a recession.
Your prephrase is that the economist responds to the critic by saying the absence of the predicted
recession is not evidence of his “bumbling,” because the recession was averted when the economic
policies were changed as a result of his prediction. The incorrect answer choices will describe some
other method of reasoning.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice. The critic’s statement itself provided the
conditional relationship ascribed to the economist in his prior year’s prediction: if the policies did not
change, then the country would soon go into a recession. The economist’s response informs you that
the government’s policies did change, to which this choice refers as “the state of affairs on which the
economist’s prediction was conditioned did not obtain.”
Answer choice (B): The economist does not indicate that the evidence is still out on his prediction.
Instead, he said the predicted recession was avoided by a policy change.
Answer choice (C): The economist did not point out internal inconsistencies within the critic’s
statement.
Answer choice (D): The only claim by the critic that could be labeled “general” was his description
of the economist’s “bumbling forecasts.” Even assuming that could be the general claim described in
this choice, the economist did not offer a counterexample to this claim. Rather, he simply denied that
last year’s forecast was bumbling.
Answer choice (E): This choice describes the opposite of the tack taken by the economist, who
acknowledged the asserted content of his prediction and added that the sufficient condition cited in
his predicted scenario did not occur.
Method of Reasoning—SN. The correct answer choice is (A)
Your task in this Method of Reasoning question is to the select the answer that provides the best
description of the economist’s response to the critic. The critic labels the economist’s last year’s
forecast as bumbling, alleging that although the economist predicted the country would soon go into
recession if the current economic policies were not changed, economic growth was even stronger this
year.
The economist responds by stating his forecast was not bumbling, and that it in fact convinced the
country’s leaders to change economic policies, preventing a recession.
Your prephrase is that the economist responds to the critic by saying the absence of the predicted
recession is not evidence of his “bumbling,” because the recession was averted when the economic
policies were changed as a result of his prediction. The incorrect answer choices will describe some
other method of reasoning.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice. The critic’s statement itself provided the
conditional relationship ascribed to the economist in his prior year’s prediction: if the policies did not
change, then the country would soon go into a recession. The economist’s response informs you that
the government’s policies did change, to which this choice refers as “the state of affairs on which the
economist’s prediction was conditioned did not obtain.”
Answer choice (B): The economist does not indicate that the evidence is still out on his prediction.
Instead, he said the predicted recession was avoided by a policy change.
Answer choice (C): The economist did not point out internal inconsistencies within the critic’s
statement.
Answer choice (D): The only claim by the critic that could be labeled “general” was his description
of the economist’s “bumbling forecasts.” Even assuming that could be the general claim described in
this choice, the economist did not offer a counterexample to this claim. Rather, he simply denied that
last year’s forecast was bumbling.
Answer choice (E): This choice describes the opposite of the tack taken by the economist, who
acknowledged the asserted content of his prediction and added that the sufficient condition cited in
his predicted scenario did not occur.