- Mon Jan 20, 2014 12:00 am
#63988
Complete Question Explanation
Flaw in the Reasoning. The correct answer choice is (C)
The travel agent quoted here makes the following questionable argument: Since most low fare
airlines have not existed long enough to establish a record, major airlines which have had enough
time to establish a safety record are safer. The problem with this argument is that just because a
safety record has been established does not mean that it is a good one.
Answer choice (A): This is not the flaw found in the stimulus’ argument, as there is no need to
address this possibility. Incidentally, if the average major airline did have a total number of accidents
as great as the average low-fare airline has had, that would still show the major airlines to be safer,
since this would mean the same number of accidents over a longer period of time.
Answer choice (B): Since the major airlines are said to have long-standing records, this cannot be a
description of the flaw from the stimulus.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice, which restates our prephrased description
of the flaw in the discussion above: a long standing and reliable record does not guarantee that an
airline is safe—on the contrary, such a record may reliably show an airline to be unsafe.
Answer choice (D): The travel agent does not presume that the safest airlines have the most reliable
documentation, and this choice does not describe the flaw as prephrased above, so it cannot be the
correct answer choice.
Answer choice (E): The discussion surrounds a comparison between the relative safety of major
airlines as compared with low-fare airlines; it is irrelevant if all airlines are likely to have had one or
more accidents, and there is no need for the argument to address this possibility.
Flaw in the Reasoning. The correct answer choice is (C)
The travel agent quoted here makes the following questionable argument: Since most low fare
airlines have not existed long enough to establish a record, major airlines which have had enough
time to establish a safety record are safer. The problem with this argument is that just because a
safety record has been established does not mean that it is a good one.
Answer choice (A): This is not the flaw found in the stimulus’ argument, as there is no need to
address this possibility. Incidentally, if the average major airline did have a total number of accidents
as great as the average low-fare airline has had, that would still show the major airlines to be safer,
since this would mean the same number of accidents over a longer period of time.
Answer choice (B): Since the major airlines are said to have long-standing records, this cannot be a
description of the flaw from the stimulus.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice, which restates our prephrased description
of the flaw in the discussion above: a long standing and reliable record does not guarantee that an
airline is safe—on the contrary, such a record may reliably show an airline to be unsafe.
Answer choice (D): The travel agent does not presume that the safest airlines have the most reliable
documentation, and this choice does not describe the flaw as prephrased above, so it cannot be the
correct answer choice.
Answer choice (E): The discussion surrounds a comparison between the relative safety of major
airlines as compared with low-fare airlines; it is irrelevant if all airlines are likely to have had one or
more accidents, and there is no need for the argument to address this possibility.