David's conclusion
"drunk driving isn't as dangerous as you claim"
why?
"because drunk drivers are actually LESS LIKELY to be injured in an accident than sober drivers".
That is definitely a premise, i.e. evidence.
You might be wondering where David heard that finding. Is he making it up? Is this a well documented phenomenon?
Either way, it's evidence. It's a premise.
(by the way, this IS a true phenomenon. Supposedly when you're drunk you "go with the fall" a little bit more and that somehow results in less injury. It must be something like how professional stunt people learn to roll into a fall so that it doesn't hurt as much)
An argument with no evidence has a name: Circular Reasoning.
The flaw answer choices that describe a Circular argument sound like this:
- assumes what it sets out to proves
- presupposes what it seeks to establish
- the conclusion is a mere restatement of the premise
These are correct 1 out of 100 times. The VAST majority of times you see it, it's wrong (as you were suspecting).
Circular arguments sound really dumb:
"Chocolate is the best flavor of ice cream. After all, other flavors aren't as good as chocolate."
For David's argument to sound like this, it would have been:
"I think you exaggerate the dangers of driving while drunk. After all, drunk driving is safer than what you claim."
Hey, look, answer choice (B) is this flaw!
That would kinda cancel out (B) and (C), since they essentially describe the same thing (although you're right to think that (C) adds an additional problem in terms of whether David really CONTRADICTED Marianna).
Hope this helps.