- Thu Aug 19, 2021 6:25 pm
#89882
Hi there farmer,
The key to circular reasoning is that there is no evidence given for the claim, other than the claim itself. Here, we have evidence: the columnist's experience. It may not be good evidence, but it is evidence.
Answer choice (D) here isn't even really a circular flaw though. It's a flaw about what the manufacturers do or don't know. But the big problem here is that it doesn't describe the information in the stimulus. The stimulus isn't about minimum standards. The stimulus is about meeting the standards manufacturers themselves report. That's a different situation, and thus answer choice (D) isn't describing what we see in the stimulus.
Hope that helps!
The key to circular reasoning is that there is no evidence given for the claim, other than the claim itself. Here, we have evidence: the columnist's experience. It may not be good evidence, but it is evidence.
Answer choice (D) here isn't even really a circular flaw though. It's a flaw about what the manufacturers do or don't know. But the big problem here is that it doesn't describe the information in the stimulus. The stimulus isn't about minimum standards. The stimulus is about meeting the standards manufacturers themselves report. That's a different situation, and thus answer choice (D) isn't describing what we see in the stimulus.
Hope that helps!