Lots of great discussion here on a very tough question!
I'd like to touch on something that
gaheexlee raised:
gaheexlee Wrote:I realized after checking my answer that I had eliminated (E) because I substituted in the wrong concrete terms for the abstract words. I thought the phrase "whenever a condition occurs" referred to crying, not being stressed. How did those who get the question correct know to substitute the correct terms in?
This is a really interesting, and important, question. When flaw answer choices are written in abstract terms, sorting out what they are
actually saying can be a significant challenge. I find that what helps me is to first sort out the overall structure of the answer choice. Also, remember that arguments are fundamentally flawed
because they assume things. In other words, arguments are flawed because they fail to consider the possibility that the premise could be true, and yet the conclusion still might not follow.
For instance, with
(C), the answer is saying that the argument
fails to address the possibility that even if [blahblahblah], it may be true that [blehblehbleh]. The 'even if' part has to be the premise! That's what we've already accepted as true. And to destroy an argument, I'd want to show that EVEN IF the premise is true, the conclusion still might not be. So, this answer choice structure really ought to be:
"fails to address the possibility that even if [the premise is true], it may be that [thing that would destroy the argument may be true]."
Now, since the premise is the thing that I
know, I'm going to line that up first! The only premise we have with a causal contribution is that [stress causes hormone production], making "stress" = "one phenomenon" and "hormones" = "second phenomenon". So, the second half of
(C) would mean that [it may be true that hormones cause stress]. Would that destroy our argument?
NOPE! That would actually totally SUPPORT our argument!
Let's apply the same analysis to
(E): "takes for granted that because [blahblahblah], it's true that [blehblehbleh]". Okay, this is classic assumption language. Arguments are flawed because they 'take for granted' that because a premise is true, it must be that the conclusion is true!
Okay, so "certain substances are present whenever a condition occurs" has to match the
premise; we're looking for "if condition, then substance". This
can't be 'crying' - the premises never told me that crying
always has certain substances present! But the premises did say that hormones are produced when we have stress! So, if stress --> hormones!
Now we know that "stress" is the condition, and "hormones" are the substance. Restating
(E) gives us:
takes for granted that because hormones are present whenever we have stress, hormones must cause the stress.
"hormones cause stress" is exactly the assumption we're looking for!
It can be incredibly helpful to take a moment to unwrap the basic structure of the abstract flaw answer
without focusing on content first, so that you can make clear decisions about which content has to match with which abstract phrases. And remember, arguments are fundamentally flawed because they assume that just because the premise is true, that must mean the conclusion is true!
Keep up the great discussion all!