by ohthatpatrick Fri Dec 31, 1999 8:00 pm
What does the Question Stem tell us?
Match the Flaw
Break down the Stimulus:
Evidence:
If you believe in ET's, then you believe in UFO's.
But UFO's do not exist.
Conclusion:
Therefore, It's false to believe in ET's (i.e. "ET's do not exist.")
Any prephrase?
Cleaning this us, we're hearing that "if you believe in X, you believe in Y". Since a belief in Y is false (conclusively refuted), then a belief in X is also false. It sounds like a contrapositive, but you can't use that logic on an association between beliefs. Belief X might be a true belief and Belief Y might be a false belief. For example, it's possible that "Everyone who believes that water's molecular structure is H20 also believes that Santa Claus is real. Since Santa Claus is not real, we know that water's molecular structure is not H20." We need a conditional statement that relates belief 1 to belief 2, a fact that belief 2 is wrong, and a conclusion that belief 1 must also be wrong.
Correct answer:
A
Answer choice analysis:
A) Looks good: If you believe in U, you believe in C. Since a belief in C is wrong, a belief in U is wrong. The weirdness is the fact that we're equating "a belief in centaurs is false" with "there are no centaurs". Is that fair to equate? Seems like it. All we mean by "believing in centaurs" is "believe that they exist". So if that belief is false, then we're saying "they don't exist".
B) Same setup, but instead of getting "a belief in C is wrong", we get "YOU don't believe in C", so "YOU don't believe in U". This is actually valid logic.
C) Same setup, and same problem with the 2nd ingredient. As it turns out, this argument is an illegal negation, but that wasn't the problem with the original argument.
D) This is very tempting. But instead of dealing with whether beliefs 1 and 2 are true vs. false, we're dealing with whether they're justified / unjustified. Those are different enough to make (A) a closer match.
E) This is also tempting. But it has a different structural order from the original. The original tried to argue about beliefs using the contrapositive. (Belief 2 is wrong, thus belief 1 is wrong). This tries to argue about beliefs using an illegal negation (belief 1 is wrong, thus belief 2 is wrong).
Takeaway/Pattern: Many times, Match the Flaw does not get nit-picky about replicating the exact same recipe of ingredients, as long as the Flaw is adequately replicated. On this one, A vs. E comes down to noticing whether the author argues via a contrapositive or a negation. Start by looking for the same Flaw, and if there are two answers that commit the same flaw, THEN start caring about the nitty-gritty ways in which the ingredients do or don't match.
#officialexplanation