- Sat Jan 21, 2012 12:00 am
#36630
Complete Question Explanation
Flaw in the Reasoning. The correct answer choice is (B)
The council member quoted here discusses the best site for a municipal emergency shelter. Although
some members of the council believe that the best location would be the courthouse, no evidence has
been provided to back up this assertion. The author concludes that the factory would provide a better
site than the courthouse. The components of this basic argument are as follows:
disproves the assertion. This is certainly not the case—in fact, the author of this stimulus wants to
dismiss the opposition’s courthouse argument based on a lack of supporting evidence, even though
the author has really presented no evidence in favor of the abandoned shoe factory as a better
location for the shelter.
Since the council member’s reasoning is questionable, you should not be surprised to see a Resolve
the Paradox question follow.
Answer choice (A): This cleverly worded incorrect choice is something of an Opposite Answer. The
problem with this choice is that the author doesn’t assert that a view is right because of a lack of
refuting evidence—this author argues that a particular view is wrong because of a lack of supporting
evidence.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice, as it provides an accurate description of the
author’s mistake: accepting a claim (that the abandoned shoe factory would be a more suitable site)
based on the fact that those in support of the courthouse as a shelter site have not provided evidence
to back their claim. The problem, of course, is that the mere absence of supporting evidence does not
disprove their assertion.
Answer choice (C): The author bases the conclusion on the lack of evidence provided by supporters
of the courthouse site, but does not attack the courthouse proponents personally, so this is not an
accurate description of the author’s flawed argumentation.
Answer choice (D): There is no appeal to fear in the author’s argument, so this cannot possibly be
the correct answer choice.
Answer choice (E): Although the author concludes that the old shoe factory would be a better
location for the shelter, this conclusion is based merely on the lack of evidence provided by the
courthouse site supporters. Since there is no specific attack on any particular argument, this choice
cannot be the one that accurately describes the problem with the author’s logic.
Flaw in the Reasoning. The correct answer choice is (B)
The council member quoted here discusses the best site for a municipal emergency shelter. Although
some members of the council believe that the best location would be the courthouse, no evidence has
been provided to back up this assertion. The author concludes that the factory would provide a better
site than the courthouse. The components of this basic argument are as follows:
- Premise: I recommend that the municipal emergency shelter be located in the
abandoned shoe factory.
Premise: Some council members assert that the courthouse would be the best location.
Premise: Those council members have provided no supporting evidence that this is the
case.
Conclusion: Thus, my recommendation is better.
disproves the assertion. This is certainly not the case—in fact, the author of this stimulus wants to
dismiss the opposition’s courthouse argument based on a lack of supporting evidence, even though
the author has really presented no evidence in favor of the abandoned shoe factory as a better
location for the shelter.
Since the council member’s reasoning is questionable, you should not be surprised to see a Resolve
the Paradox question follow.
Answer choice (A): This cleverly worded incorrect choice is something of an Opposite Answer. The
problem with this choice is that the author doesn’t assert that a view is right because of a lack of
refuting evidence—this author argues that a particular view is wrong because of a lack of supporting
evidence.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice, as it provides an accurate description of the
author’s mistake: accepting a claim (that the abandoned shoe factory would be a more suitable site)
based on the fact that those in support of the courthouse as a shelter site have not provided evidence
to back their claim. The problem, of course, is that the mere absence of supporting evidence does not
disprove their assertion.
Answer choice (C): The author bases the conclusion on the lack of evidence provided by supporters
of the courthouse site, but does not attack the courthouse proponents personally, so this is not an
accurate description of the author’s flawed argumentation.
Answer choice (D): There is no appeal to fear in the author’s argument, so this cannot possibly be
the correct answer choice.
Answer choice (E): Although the author concludes that the old shoe factory would be a better
location for the shelter, this conclusion is based merely on the lack of evidence provided by the
courthouse site supporters. Since there is no specific attack on any particular argument, this choice
cannot be the one that accurately describes the problem with the author’s logic.