- Mon Dec 09, 2013 8:08 pm
#13216
wwarui,
Rephrase what the stimulus is saying to make the flaw more apparent:
Some daisies are chrysanthemums
Some chrysanthemums are edible and palatable
So, some daisies are edible and palatable
We don't know that daisies and edible, palatable chrysanthemums overlap. Say there are 10 kinds of chrysanthemums, 2 of which are daisies. This leaves 8 kinds of chrysanthemums that are not daisies. Say that 2 of these 8 are the only edible, palatable chrysanthemums. Then there is no overlap between daisies and edible, palatable chrysanthemums - they are totally different groups. This is the flaw in the reasoning.
Answer choices:
A: Jeanne is a member of the chorus, and the chorus is renowned. The flaw here is twofold: saying that if the whole is renowned, something must be true of the part (Jeanne), and saying that Jeanne is excellent just because the chorus is renowned (we don't have any reason to think there must be a connection between excellent singing and being renowned). This is not the flaw we are looking for.
B: All members of the group are avid readers, and Rolfe is a member of the group. Thus, he is an avid reader. This is valid! So it's not the correct answer.
C: Say the debate team has 10 members, and 2 of those are Noriko's sisters. Of the remaining 8, 2 are poor students. We don't know if the groups overlap, so this exhibits the same flaw as the stimulus and is the correct answer.
D: Most of Leon's friends are good swimmers, and all good swimmers are quite strong. Those friends are therefore quite strong. So it's likely that some of them (most of them is still some!) are quite strong. This is not the correct answer.
E: The issue with this answer is not what is in the stimulus, where two groups that did not need to overlap were assumed to overlap (that was the flaw). Here, instead, there is new information in the conclusion: some of Teresa's colleagues are good writers. We only know that many have written books, and most of those books are on good writing. We don't know that they ARE good writers, only that they have written on the subject. This is a flaw, but not the one we need.
Robert