- Wed Apr 24, 2019 6:42 pm
#64393
Hi Leela,
Correct answer choices for parallel flaw questions will exhibit the same flaw as the stimulus, but all other factors, such as order in which the conclusion and premises are presented or subject matter may differ. In this case, we have two flaws: a small, not necessarily representative sample, the result of which is used to draw an overly broad conclusion. In the stimulus, this is a problem of surveying only 5 dentists, who only claim that the product in question is the best toothpaste for fighting cavities, not necessarily the best way to fight cavities overall (one could think of other ways, like cutting sugar out of one's diet).
Answer choice (B) fails to parallel the stimulus immediately, as it only claims that "some" voters think Gomez is the best. This qualification isn't present in the original stimulus, and is actually supported by the survey, as the survey participants alone could comprise "some voters." Because the logical force of the conclusion is so weak here, only one of the flaws, the assumption that best policies equals best candidate, is present.
Answer choice (D) does parallel the stimulus by having both flawed elements present: a potentially unrepresentative survey used to claim that all voters "know" Gomez is the best because ten agreed that his policies would help the nation more than any other policies (which ignores all other factors about the candidate, such as viability of implementing said policies, individual corruption, etc.). So here, as in the stimulus, the conclusion is far to strong for the essentially meaningless evidence to support.
Hope this clears things up!
Correct answer choices for parallel flaw questions will exhibit the same flaw as the stimulus, but all other factors, such as order in which the conclusion and premises are presented or subject matter may differ. In this case, we have two flaws: a small, not necessarily representative sample, the result of which is used to draw an overly broad conclusion. In the stimulus, this is a problem of surveying only 5 dentists, who only claim that the product in question is the best toothpaste for fighting cavities, not necessarily the best way to fight cavities overall (one could think of other ways, like cutting sugar out of one's diet).
Answer choice (B) fails to parallel the stimulus immediately, as it only claims that "some" voters think Gomez is the best. This qualification isn't present in the original stimulus, and is actually supported by the survey, as the survey participants alone could comprise "some voters." Because the logical force of the conclusion is so weak here, only one of the flaws, the assumption that best policies equals best candidate, is present.
Answer choice (D) does parallel the stimulus by having both flawed elements present: a potentially unrepresentative survey used to claim that all voters "know" Gomez is the best because ten agreed that his policies would help the nation more than any other policies (which ignores all other factors about the candidate, such as viability of implementing said policies, individual corruption, etc.). So here, as in the stimulus, the conclusion is far to strong for the essentially meaningless evidence to support.
Hope this clears things up!