by JinZ551 Mon Aug 05, 2019 1:25 pm
Just wanted to write down my thought process for this question.
I have picked the wrong anwer choice D, however, when I reviewed this question and the stimulus, I found that I did not notice the shift appeared in Raghnall's argument, which is attacked by the author.
Raghnall's argument:
money is the major problem in marriage ---> Financial problems are the major problem in marriage.
Here we should notice that in Raghnall's argument, there is a shift from "MONEY" (fact, survey result) to "Financial problem" (Raghnall's interpretation)
Author's argument:
couples express OTHER TYPES of marital frustration in financial terms ----> survey data do not establish that financial problems are the major problem in marriage (which means Raghnall's conclusion unfounded.)
Here "financial term" means money, which means "money" does not necessarily indicates "financial problem", can also be "OTHER TYPES of marital
frustration"
A: author did not offer any specific counter example, eliminate
B: correct, while Raghnall interprets "money" to be "financial problems", the author suggest an alternative explanation to be "other types of marital frustration”
C: The author is not critizing the use of statistical method, eliminate
D: The author is not critizing the survey, but attacking Raghnall's interpretation of survey data
E: Like the post above, "cannot" is unsupported.