- Mon Jan 23, 2023 2:40 pm
#99006
Hi Bmas,
Did you mean that you were between Answers B and D (rather than B and C)?
Answer C is describing an error in conditional reasoning (i.e. a Mistaken Reversal). This is not the flaw in the argument. While the argument does state that fresh okra is necessary for the best seafood gumbo, it doesn't then conclude that if a seafood gumbo has fresh okra, then it must be the best seafood gumbo, which would be the Mistaken Reversal described in this answer.
Answer B is describing an error of division, or whole-to-part flaw. An example of this flaw would be one ingredient in the seafood gumbo (such as rice) lacks the quality of being spicy, therefore the seafood gumbo itself is not spicy. Obviously, as long as you add enough spices to the gumbo, the gumbo will be spicy even if not every ingredient was spicy initially. This is not the flaw in this argument. The argument doesn't conclude from a lack of fresh okra that the seafood gumbo is not fresh. (Of course, unlike the example above regarding a non-spicy ingredient, all it would take is one spoiled or rotten ingredient to potentially ruin a dish, so this wouldn't necessarily even be a flaw in the context of fresh/non-fresh ingredients.)
Answer D is the correct answer. It identifies the flaw in the argument which is the change in terms from "best seafood gumbo" in the premise to "good seafood gumbo" in the conclusion. Even if it is true that fresh okra is necessary for the "best seafood gumbo" that doesn't mean that it is also necessary for just "good seafood gumbo." Maybe Chris can still manage to make "good seafood gumbo" even with okra that isn't fresh.