- Sat Sep 13, 2014 12:24 pm
#16621
Hi,
I've encountered a few Flaw in the reasoning questions where the question stem would indicate that a certain action should not be taken or done on account of some negative things involved with that action (either consequences or what needs to be done in order to do those actions), and other than what those negative things are, they don't present much else.
In questions like this, the correct answer seems to be always along the lines of "rejects trying to achieve a goal because of the cost of achieving it, without considering the benefits of achieving it". Would it be safe to assume that in every Flaw in the reasoning questions that presents a stimulus along this line, that an answer choice similar to the one above is most likely going to be correct? I guess what I'm trying to say is, does the author always have to present both sides of the argument in this case? And does this also work in the reverse case as well, when only benefits are presented in the stimulus?
Also, If there is a stimulus that presents an argument similar to that above, but also has, for example, a causal reasoning error, which one would be "most flawed/questionable" in this sense?
I'm just having a hard time trying to wrap my head around this sort of question
Thanks in advance,
- Anoop
(Also, if it helps, I'm referring to questions similar to the one presented in the October 2008 Preptest - Section 1 Question 14)
I've encountered a few Flaw in the reasoning questions where the question stem would indicate that a certain action should not be taken or done on account of some negative things involved with that action (either consequences or what needs to be done in order to do those actions), and other than what those negative things are, they don't present much else.
In questions like this, the correct answer seems to be always along the lines of "rejects trying to achieve a goal because of the cost of achieving it, without considering the benefits of achieving it". Would it be safe to assume that in every Flaw in the reasoning questions that presents a stimulus along this line, that an answer choice similar to the one above is most likely going to be correct? I guess what I'm trying to say is, does the author always have to present both sides of the argument in this case? And does this also work in the reverse case as well, when only benefits are presented in the stimulus?
Also, If there is a stimulus that presents an argument similar to that above, but also has, for example, a causal reasoning error, which one would be "most flawed/questionable" in this sense?
I'm just having a hard time trying to wrap my head around this sort of question
Thanks in advance,
- Anoop
(Also, if it helps, I'm referring to questions similar to the one presented in the October 2008 Preptest - Section 1 Question 14)