- Sun Sep 20, 2015 11:00 pm
#34690
Complete Question Explanation
Method of Reasoning—AP. The correct answer choice is (D)
This stimulus begins with the conclusion. The statement is rather lengthy, and is designed to be a bit confusing, so make sure to reduce the author's statements into your own words. Restated for brevity, the conclusion is that Fraenger's claim Bosch was a member of the Brethren of the Free Spirit is unlikely to be right. The author finds it unlikely because there is no evidence to support that view and there is evidence to the contrary, i.e., that he was a member of a mainstream church.
Note that the argument feels flawed, in that some evidence against Fraenger's assertion is taken to mean that the assertion is "unlikely to be correct." This is less emphatic than the classic flaw where "some evidence against a position is taken to mean that position is false," but it is in that same vein. However, instead of a Flaw question, we are instead presented with a Method of Reasoning—Argument Part question. Specifically, we are tasked with identifying the role played in the stimulus by the final statement that “there is no evidence that Bosch was a member of the Brethren.” Your prephrase should reflect that this statement is a premise offered in support of the conclusion that it is unlikely that Bosch was a member of that group.
Answer choice (A): While this answer choice correctly identifies the statement as a premise (and thus appears initially attractive), the answer choice is incorrect because it then overstates the strength of the argument’s conclusion. The given premise doesn't "guarantee the falsity" of the assertion, and in any LR argument it would be virtually impossible to "guarantee the falsity" of any claim since that's difficult to do and doubly so in such limited space.
Answer choice (B): This answer choice is incorrect because that final claim isn't used to support the idea that Bosch was a member of a mainstream church, but rather that he wasn't a member of the Brethren of the Free Spirit. That distinction, which can initially be hard to see, is critical to eliminating this answer choice!
Answer choice (C): The stimulus author did not make any statements attacking Fraenger’s credibility. If you interpreted the counterevidence presented as attacking credibility in an indirect sense, that's not how argumentation on this test works. Simply presenting counterevidence keeps things in the debate arena (which is considered reasonable). To question credibility would be to attack someone's standing to make the argument or have their evidence considered in the first place, such as "Fraenger was known to be Bosch's personal enemy, and had spread misinformation about him in the past, so many of his statements need to be first examined for factual truth," or some similar type of attack.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. In stating that there was no evidence showing Bosch was a member of the Brethren, the author does cast doubt on Fraenger’s hypothesis, and so the first part of this answer passes the Fact Test. The second part also passes because by saying there was no evidence, the question of sufficiency of evidence is addressed (namely that if you have no evidence, then you have insufficient evidence).
Answer choice (E): The claim in question isn't directed at that portion of the discussion, and thus this answer choice is incorrect. It was Fraenger's hypothesis that offered a path to understanding Bosch's subject matter, but this final claim instead addresses whether Bosch was a member of the Brethren.
Method of Reasoning—AP. The correct answer choice is (D)
This stimulus begins with the conclusion. The statement is rather lengthy, and is designed to be a bit confusing, so make sure to reduce the author's statements into your own words. Restated for brevity, the conclusion is that Fraenger's claim Bosch was a member of the Brethren of the Free Spirit is unlikely to be right. The author finds it unlikely because there is no evidence to support that view and there is evidence to the contrary, i.e., that he was a member of a mainstream church.
Note that the argument feels flawed, in that some evidence against Fraenger's assertion is taken to mean that the assertion is "unlikely to be correct." This is less emphatic than the classic flaw where "some evidence against a position is taken to mean that position is false," but it is in that same vein. However, instead of a Flaw question, we are instead presented with a Method of Reasoning—Argument Part question. Specifically, we are tasked with identifying the role played in the stimulus by the final statement that “there is no evidence that Bosch was a member of the Brethren.” Your prephrase should reflect that this statement is a premise offered in support of the conclusion that it is unlikely that Bosch was a member of that group.
Answer choice (A): While this answer choice correctly identifies the statement as a premise (and thus appears initially attractive), the answer choice is incorrect because it then overstates the strength of the argument’s conclusion. The given premise doesn't "guarantee the falsity" of the assertion, and in any LR argument it would be virtually impossible to "guarantee the falsity" of any claim since that's difficult to do and doubly so in such limited space.
Answer choice (B): This answer choice is incorrect because that final claim isn't used to support the idea that Bosch was a member of a mainstream church, but rather that he wasn't a member of the Brethren of the Free Spirit. That distinction, which can initially be hard to see, is critical to eliminating this answer choice!
Answer choice (C): The stimulus author did not make any statements attacking Fraenger’s credibility. If you interpreted the counterevidence presented as attacking credibility in an indirect sense, that's not how argumentation on this test works. Simply presenting counterevidence keeps things in the debate arena (which is considered reasonable). To question credibility would be to attack someone's standing to make the argument or have their evidence considered in the first place, such as "Fraenger was known to be Bosch's personal enemy, and had spread misinformation about him in the past, so many of his statements need to be first examined for factual truth," or some similar type of attack.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. In stating that there was no evidence showing Bosch was a member of the Brethren, the author does cast doubt on Fraenger’s hypothesis, and so the first part of this answer passes the Fact Test. The second part also passes because by saying there was no evidence, the question of sufficiency of evidence is addressed (namely that if you have no evidence, then you have insufficient evidence).
Answer choice (E): The claim in question isn't directed at that portion of the discussion, and thus this answer choice is incorrect. It was Fraenger's hypothesis that offered a path to understanding Bosch's subject matter, but this final claim instead addresses whether Bosch was a member of the Brethren.