- Thu Feb 25, 2016 12:00 am
#35327
Complete Question Explanation
Flaw in the Reasoning. The correct answer choice is (B).
This stimulus provides Wexell’s argument, and Robinson’s response. Wexell’s argument is that the
museum’s purchase of props and costumes from famous plays was wasteful, because those costumes
don’t have artistic value in any other context beyond the plays that featured them.
used in any other way. Robinson’s response breaks down as follows:
purchased were a waste of the museum’s money. Robinson tries to defend the purchase by pointing
out that display is the only way to get value out of them—but the fact that the costumes have only
one remaining value does not support the argument that the purchase was worthwhile.
The question that follows asks for the flaw in Robinson’s argument. Robinson’s response does not
really respond to Wexell’s argument, which deals with the items’ lack of artistic value; the fact that
they can be displayed does not give them artistic value.
Answer choice (A): The issue with Robinson’s argument is not that he lacks the evidence to make his
point—rather it is that his point is not responsive to Wexell’s argument regarding artistic value.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice; Robinson’s argument is based on the
premise that display is the items’ only remaining value, but the fact that they might have only one
remaining use does not refute Wexell’s assertion that the props and costumes have no remaining
artistic value.
Answer choice (C): This answer choice describes a Source Argument, one in which the attack is
on the source of an argument rather than on its merits. Robinson does not attack Wexell personally,
though; instead Robinson employs faulty reasoning in refuting Wexell’s point.
Answer choice (D): This choice does not reflect the argumentation found in the stimulus; Robinson
does not refute Wexell’s point on the basis of a lack of information; Robinson refutes Wexell on the
basis of a weak premise that is not responsive to Wexell’s argument.
Answer choice (E): This choice describes the classic conditional flaw of Mistaken Reversal, in which
a sufficient condition is mistaken for a necessary condition. The issue with Robinson’s argument,
however, is based not on a conditional reasoning error, but on irrelevance.
Flaw in the Reasoning. The correct answer choice is (B).
This stimulus provides Wexell’s argument, and Robinson’s response. Wexell’s argument is that the
museum’s purchase of props and costumes from famous plays was wasteful, because those costumes
don’t have artistic value in any other context beyond the plays that featured them.
- Premise: The costumes that were purchased by the museum have no artistic value
beyond their original use in the productions in which they were featured.
Conclusion: The purchase was a waste of money.
used in any other way. Robinson’s response breaks down as follows:
- Premise: A lot of the props and costumes are too fragile to use in a performance,
making them useful only as displays.
Conclusion: Therefore the purchase was not a waste of money.
purchased were a waste of the museum’s money. Robinson tries to defend the purchase by pointing
out that display is the only way to get value out of them—but the fact that the costumes have only
one remaining value does not support the argument that the purchase was worthwhile.
The question that follows asks for the flaw in Robinson’s argument. Robinson’s response does not
really respond to Wexell’s argument, which deals with the items’ lack of artistic value; the fact that
they can be displayed does not give them artistic value.
Answer choice (A): The issue with Robinson’s argument is not that he lacks the evidence to make his
point—rather it is that his point is not responsive to Wexell’s argument regarding artistic value.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice; Robinson’s argument is based on the
premise that display is the items’ only remaining value, but the fact that they might have only one
remaining use does not refute Wexell’s assertion that the props and costumes have no remaining
artistic value.
Answer choice (C): This answer choice describes a Source Argument, one in which the attack is
on the source of an argument rather than on its merits. Robinson does not attack Wexell personally,
though; instead Robinson employs faulty reasoning in refuting Wexell’s point.
Answer choice (D): This choice does not reflect the argumentation found in the stimulus; Robinson
does not refute Wexell’s point on the basis of a lack of information; Robinson refutes Wexell on the
basis of a weak premise that is not responsive to Wexell’s argument.
Answer choice (E): This choice describes the classic conditional flaw of Mistaken Reversal, in which
a sufficient condition is mistaken for a necessary condition. The issue with Robinson’s argument,
however, is based not on a conditional reasoning error, but on irrelevance.