- Fri Jun 30, 2017 6:31 pm
#36620
Answer choice (A) informs us that the studies only measured a specific type of improvement in patients, which means that other types of improvements could differ wildly based on the type of psychotherapy they received. The author concluded that any improvements in short term psychotherapy must be common to all, but if only one type of psychotherapy produces an improvement in patients that other psychotherapies do not, then the author's conclusion does not stand. Answer choice (A) leaves the door open for this possibility; it would force the researcher to go back and measure the rates of improvements in other factors that they have not yet studied in order to defend their conclusion.
Answer choice (D) doesn't really affect the argument. As long as all psychotherapies use at least one practice common to all psychotherapy, then the author's conclusion stands just as strongly. We don't care about the "specific techniques," the techniques that are unique to each type of psychotherapy; we only care that there are some techniques that are common to all psychotherapies.
Answer choice (E) makes a distinction between experience levels of psychotherapists, which is not relevant to the argument. The pertinent distinction is between the types of psychotherapies that they practice.
Answer choice (D) doesn't really affect the argument. As long as all psychotherapies use at least one practice common to all psychotherapy, then the author's conclusion stands just as strongly. We don't care about the "specific techniques," the techniques that are unique to each type of psychotherapy; we only care that there are some techniques that are common to all psychotherapies.
Answer choice (E) makes a distinction between experience levels of psychotherapists, which is not relevant to the argument. The pertinent distinction is between the types of psychotherapies that they practice.