21. (A)
Question Type: Identify the Flaw
This is a classic "cause vs. correlation" issue. Ownership of a minivan is correlated with lower accident rates, but in no way does this mean that owning a minivan causes one have a lower risk of accident (maybe those who own minivans are just naturally more cautious people in the first place). Thus, the driver is incorrect in concluding so. Answer (A) is correct. An equivalently flawed argument would be:
Many rich people eat caviar. Therefore, if I begin eating caviar I will get rich.
This is, of course, a ridiculous argument because it confuses a correlation with a cause. Eating caviar does not cause one to be rich.
(B) tries to tempt us with the common "sample size" flaw language, but we know nothing about the sample size used in the driver’s research.
(C) is incorrect. This isn’t a case of likely versus certain.
(D) tempts us with familiar conditional logic language: sufficient and necessary conditions. Here’s an example of mistaking a sufficient condition for a necessary condition: "Switching from a sports car to a minivan (sufficient condition) causes the driver to drive more cautiously (necessary condition). Because John has begun driving more cautiously, he must have switched from a sports car to a minivan." No! Not necessarily true. The conclusion in this argument has mistaken a sufficient condition for a necessary condition. This is another way of saying that the argument has reversed the logic. #21 does not contain this type of flaw.
(E) is ambiguous at best. Which source are we talking about? Friends? Research? Either way, we have no way of knowing if they are well-informed or not.
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