- PowerScore Staff
- Posts: 215
- Joined: Jul 06, 2021
- Wed Aug 04, 2021 6:24 pm
#89353
Hello everyone,
Yes, just wanted to clarify further as to the nature of answer choice D, which definitely is a "gotcha" contender, but is also definitely not the best answer, especially not in comparison to answer choice C. Definitely, as mentioned above, being in "good health" is not the same as "having a beneficial impact on one's health," so for that reason (possibly even standing alone), answer choice D is not the correct answer in terms of identifying the particular flaw in the reasoning.
Notice also that D skips over the real flaw though. D is purely focused on the switch in wording, when, in actuality, the flaw is based on the inference of causality, or at least the relative weight (intended) given to the study results that merely found a correlation between aerobic exercise and lung disease. As we probably have long had ingrained in our minds, correlation is not causation, and this is actually the true flaw in the stimulus. The conclusion reads it "must" be the case, when such a definitive statement, about anything really, cannot be drawn purely on the results of the study. The fact that C identifies the true flaw, while D merely focuses on the association (which, i would agree, is still an error in this case), is why C is the best answer here.
Let me know if you have further questions.
Yes, just wanted to clarify further as to the nature of answer choice D, which definitely is a "gotcha" contender, but is also definitely not the best answer, especially not in comparison to answer choice C. Definitely, as mentioned above, being in "good health" is not the same as "having a beneficial impact on one's health," so for that reason (possibly even standing alone), answer choice D is not the correct answer in terms of identifying the particular flaw in the reasoning.
Notice also that D skips over the real flaw though. D is purely focused on the switch in wording, when, in actuality, the flaw is based on the inference of causality, or at least the relative weight (intended) given to the study results that merely found a correlation between aerobic exercise and lung disease. As we probably have long had ingrained in our minds, correlation is not causation, and this is actually the true flaw in the stimulus. The conclusion reads it "must" be the case, when such a definitive statement, about anything really, cannot be drawn purely on the results of the study. The fact that C identifies the true flaw, while D merely focuses on the association (which, i would agree, is still an error in this case), is why C is the best answer here.
Let me know if you have further questions.