- Mon Dec 02, 2019 6:12 pm
#72378
Hello,
After doing a couple LR sections, I notice that I keep getting Flaw questions wrong. After I read the explanation for each correct and incorrect answer, I sometimes find the explanation merely saying "yes, that's a flaw but that's not a flaw for this stimulus" I find that quite confusing. Although I understand that it can be a flaw, but not the flaw represented in the stimulus. How do I know if a flaw is the applicable flaw with all the answer choices touching upon possible flaws in the stimulus? I find myself having a hard time processing the difficult language in the answer choices. Sometimes, I notice that I made illegitimate connections with the stimulus and the answer choices because I guess I'm trying to find the "correct" answer. I review the flaws everyday to make sure I'm on top of the game but I think it might be the difficult wording in the answer choices and the possible but not applicable flaws that are messing me up.
Do you think it's a good method to use a weakening approach to some flaw questions? For example, PT 6, S3, Q20.
Conclusion: Hence, psychotherapy cannot possibly be a form of coercion.
P1:Psychotherapy has been described as a form of moral coercion.
P2: When people are coerced, their ability to make choices is restricted
P3: the goal of psychotherapy is to enhance people's ability to make choices.
The way I attacked this question: I initially thought of the weakening approach, which I will explain below (but I usually stray away from this because I think it may take into account things not may not necessarily be in the scope of the argument). Then, I used the regular identify the flaw with the answer choices. I chose D because I confused the goals of psychotherapy (to enhance people's ability to make choices) with the conclusion (psychotherapy cannot possibly be a form of coercion). So, the goals of psychotherapy (psychotherapy cannot possibly be a form of coercion) are taken to justify any means that are used (enhance people's ability to make choices) to achieve those goals. I obviously need to be more careful with identifying the conclusion and premises.
Is this weakening approach good?
What I need to do? Identify the flaw
What is the flaw here? The conclusion states that psychotherapy cannot possibly be a form of coercion. Well, what if it could be a form of coercion? Then that would weaken the argument and be the flaw. The goal is still the same - to enhance people's ability to make choices so the actual practice of psychotherapy is running counter to its goals and resulting in a form of coercion. Hence, making C correct.
Also, can someone please explain why the rest of the answer choices are wrong in PT 6, S3, Q20.
Thanks in advance!
After doing a couple LR sections, I notice that I keep getting Flaw questions wrong. After I read the explanation for each correct and incorrect answer, I sometimes find the explanation merely saying "yes, that's a flaw but that's not a flaw for this stimulus" I find that quite confusing. Although I understand that it can be a flaw, but not the flaw represented in the stimulus. How do I know if a flaw is the applicable flaw with all the answer choices touching upon possible flaws in the stimulus? I find myself having a hard time processing the difficult language in the answer choices. Sometimes, I notice that I made illegitimate connections with the stimulus and the answer choices because I guess I'm trying to find the "correct" answer. I review the flaws everyday to make sure I'm on top of the game but I think it might be the difficult wording in the answer choices and the possible but not applicable flaws that are messing me up.
Do you think it's a good method to use a weakening approach to some flaw questions? For example, PT 6, S3, Q20.
Conclusion: Hence, psychotherapy cannot possibly be a form of coercion.
P1:Psychotherapy has been described as a form of moral coercion.
P2: When people are coerced, their ability to make choices is restricted
P3: the goal of psychotherapy is to enhance people's ability to make choices.
The way I attacked this question: I initially thought of the weakening approach, which I will explain below (but I usually stray away from this because I think it may take into account things not may not necessarily be in the scope of the argument). Then, I used the regular identify the flaw with the answer choices. I chose D because I confused the goals of psychotherapy (to enhance people's ability to make choices) with the conclusion (psychotherapy cannot possibly be a form of coercion). So, the goals of psychotherapy (psychotherapy cannot possibly be a form of coercion) are taken to justify any means that are used (enhance people's ability to make choices) to achieve those goals. I obviously need to be more careful with identifying the conclusion and premises.
Is this weakening approach good?
What I need to do? Identify the flaw
What is the flaw here? The conclusion states that psychotherapy cannot possibly be a form of coercion. Well, what if it could be a form of coercion? Then that would weaken the argument and be the flaw. The goal is still the same - to enhance people's ability to make choices so the actual practice of psychotherapy is running counter to its goals and resulting in a form of coercion. Hence, making C correct.
Also, can someone please explain why the rest of the answer choices are wrong in PT 6, S3, Q20.
Thanks in advance!