- Fri Oct 19, 2018 6:26 pm
#59675
Boston,
My reaction to the stimulus is that you can't flip percent relationships like that without knowing how the group sizes compare to each other. The stimulus might show that cat owners are more likely to have a degree when compared to dog owners. The claim that degree holders are more likely to have cats than dogs is an erroneous reversal of that relationship, although it is because of number concepts instead of conditional concepts.
For example, we will use one person to a household to stay sane. Imagine that you have 100 people with cats, and 1000 people with dogs. That is 47 cat people degrees, and 380 dog people degrees. Because there are far more dog people degrees than cat people degrees, having a degree will be associated with being more likely to have a dog than to have a cat.
That is answer choice (B), and it is also one of the standard ways of attacking a stimulus with reasoning that is based on percentages.