- Wed May 24, 2017 11:07 am
#35317
Complete Question Explanation
Flaw in the Reasoning. The correct answer choice is (E)
Here, the mayor discusses city council’s options for dealing with the increased traffic congestion
projected for the future. According to the mayor, the council must choose between building a new
expressway (as the mayor would prefer), and doing nothing at all. By all accounts, doing nothing
would lead to gridlock within a decade, ruling out that option. Therefore, the mayor concludes, the
council should build the new expressway.
The argument can be broken down as follows:
that the decision must be between his plan and...nothing. This type of flawed argument is known as
a “false dilemma.” Since the mayor provides no support for the assertion that his plan is the only
remaining viable option, this argument is flawed.
The stimulus is followed by a Flaw in the Reasoning question, so the correct answer choice will relay
the fact that the mayor, without justification, asserts that there are only two possible reactions to the
city council debate.
Answer choice (A): The issue here is not with the number of estimates considered; even the most
conservative estimates show that some solution is necessary within the next decade. That means that
a wider range of estimates would probably show an even greater need—but would not explain why
the only available action is the mayor’s expressway plan.
Answer choice (B): This choice might have caught people who were reading too quickly—the
mayor takes for granted that the two options presented are the only ones available, not that they are
mutually exclusive. Incidentally, this would not be a flaw, because the two choices presented are in
fact mutually exclusive: there is no way that the council can choose to do nothing and also choose to
do something.
Answer choice (C): The mayor is dealing with a situation that will no longer be viable within ten
years, so something must be done before then. The argument does not require considering the
possibility that traffic will eventually diminish, so this choice does not describe the flaw from the
mayor’s argument.
Answer choice (D): The problem needs to be resolved, because the city cannot deal with the traffic
gridlock; the mayor does not need to specify what the exact costs would be.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. In an obvious effort to push the expressway
plan, the mayor claims that only two options are available—the expressway, or nothing—without any
support for the notion that only two options exist.
Flaw in the Reasoning. The correct answer choice is (E)
Here, the mayor discusses city council’s options for dealing with the increased traffic congestion
projected for the future. According to the mayor, the council must choose between building a new
expressway (as the mayor would prefer), and doing nothing at all. By all accounts, doing nothing
would lead to gridlock within a decade, ruling out that option. Therefore, the mayor concludes, the
council should build the new expressway.
The argument can be broken down as follows:
- Premise: The council must either decide on the mayor’s plan or do nothing.
Premise: Because of predicted gridlock within ten years, doing nothing is not an option.
Conclusion: The council must therefore decide to adopt the mayor’s plan.
that the decision must be between his plan and...nothing. This type of flawed argument is known as
a “false dilemma.” Since the mayor provides no support for the assertion that his plan is the only
remaining viable option, this argument is flawed.
The stimulus is followed by a Flaw in the Reasoning question, so the correct answer choice will relay
the fact that the mayor, without justification, asserts that there are only two possible reactions to the
city council debate.
Answer choice (A): The issue here is not with the number of estimates considered; even the most
conservative estimates show that some solution is necessary within the next decade. That means that
a wider range of estimates would probably show an even greater need—but would not explain why
the only available action is the mayor’s expressway plan.
Answer choice (B): This choice might have caught people who were reading too quickly—the
mayor takes for granted that the two options presented are the only ones available, not that they are
mutually exclusive. Incidentally, this would not be a flaw, because the two choices presented are in
fact mutually exclusive: there is no way that the council can choose to do nothing and also choose to
do something.
Answer choice (C): The mayor is dealing with a situation that will no longer be viable within ten
years, so something must be done before then. The argument does not require considering the
possibility that traffic will eventually diminish, so this choice does not describe the flaw from the
mayor’s argument.
Answer choice (D): The problem needs to be resolved, because the city cannot deal with the traffic
gridlock; the mayor does not need to specify what the exact costs would be.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. In an obvious effort to push the expressway
plan, the mayor claims that only two options are available—the expressway, or nothing—without any
support for the notion that only two options exist.