- Mon Jul 17, 2017 4:38 pm
#37373
Complete Question Explanation
Flaw in the Reasoning. The correct answer choice is (C)
Anna quotes an ancient Roman scholar who claimed that rainbows always occur opposite the sun.
William finds the scholar’s claims to be false. His reasoning is that the same scholar made several
other assertions that are clearly false.
William’s counterargument contains a logical flaw. Just because the scholar in question was not
always correct does not mean that his claims about rainbows are also incorrect.
Answer choice (A): William does not distort Anna’s conclusion; he merely disagrees with it. The
flaw in his reasoning is not a Straw Man.
Answer choice (B): William does not assume that the Roman scholar was in bad faith when making
incorrect assertions. This is a Source argument, for which there is no evidence here.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice. Just because some of the Roman scholar’s
assertions are provably false does not mean that his claims about rainbows are also false.
Answer choice (D): William does not accept the ancient Roman scholar’s claims; on the contrary—
he rejects them.
Answer choice (E): There is no evidence suggesting that William would view the scholar’s claims as
outdated. This answer choice falls entirely outside the scope of William’s counterargument.
Flaw in the Reasoning. The correct answer choice is (C)
Anna quotes an ancient Roman scholar who claimed that rainbows always occur opposite the sun.
William finds the scholar’s claims to be false. His reasoning is that the same scholar made several
other assertions that are clearly false.
William’s counterargument contains a logical flaw. Just because the scholar in question was not
always correct does not mean that his claims about rainbows are also incorrect.
Answer choice (A): William does not distort Anna’s conclusion; he merely disagrees with it. The
flaw in his reasoning is not a Straw Man.
Answer choice (B): William does not assume that the Roman scholar was in bad faith when making
incorrect assertions. This is a Source argument, for which there is no evidence here.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice. Just because some of the Roman scholar’s
assertions are provably false does not mean that his claims about rainbows are also false.
Answer choice (D): William does not accept the ancient Roman scholar’s claims; on the contrary—
he rejects them.
Answer choice (E): There is no evidence suggesting that William would view the scholar’s claims as
outdated. This answer choice falls entirely outside the scope of William’s counterargument.