Question Type:
Flaw (how is this stuff above vulnerable to criticism)
Stimulus Breakdown:
Principle: If most people who eat a certain product would be upset to discover it contains a certain ingredient, then that product needs a label saying that the product contains that controversial ingredient.
Application's Conclusion: Crackly Crisps doesn't need a label for the GMO ingredients.
Application's Evidence: Most people who eat CC's wouldn't care if they knew it had GMO ingredients in it.
Answer Anticipation:
The principle we were given says,
"if xyz is true, then product X needs to be labeled".
The author is trying to use that principle to say,
"since xyz is not true, then product X does not need to be labeled".
That's an illegal negation of the principle.
(I could say "if you earn more than $50,000 in wages, you need to file a tax return." That doesn't mean I get to say "Warren Buffet, however makes less than $50,000 in wages. Thus, he does not need to file a tax return." After all, maybe OTHER types of income are ALSO enough to justify needing a tax return.)
Similarly, just because Crackly Crisps doesn't trigger the "most consumers would be upset" rule doesn't mean that there isn't some other rule that requires labeling GMO ingredients that Crackly Crisp WOULD trigger.
When we're doing a Flaw question and the author botches conditional logic, we can always prephrase "necessary vs. sufficient" language, or we can look for a more conversational answer that says "there might be some OTHER rule about required labeling that DOES apply to Crackly Crisps"
Correct Answer:
E
Answer Choice Analysis:
(A) Would this weaken? No. The rule doesn't need the consumers of the specific food to be representative. The rule is phrased to be specifically about a majority of THE PRODUCT's users.
(B) Would this weaken? No. In fact, it sounds like it kinda strengthens the idea that CC doesn't need to warn people about its GMO ingredients.
(C) Does this match? No. The value judgment of "whether or not consumers would care" is VERY compatible with the principle; in fact, it's the entire essence of what the principle is based on.
(D) Was this assumed? No. This is an extreme idea, since it's a conditional rule. The author doesn't need to assume that EVERY time that most consumers would sign off on a few ingredients in a food, they would sign off on all the ingredients in that food. The author's argument is only about Crackly Crisps, and only about whether or not a label is needed for the GMO ingredients.
(E) Does this match? Yes! The provided rule was this:
"Under certain circumstances" = "when most consumers of a product would be freaked out about an ingredient",
"a certain action should be taken" = "the food needs a label disclosing that ingredient".
The author's application was this:
"In the absence of those conditions" = "most CC consumers would NOT be freaked out about GMO ingredients",
"the action should not be taken" = "CC need not be labeled as containing GMO ingredients".
Takeaway/Pattern: The most common Classic Flaw to still show up on modern Flaw questions is the Conditional Logic Flaw (aka "Necessary vs. Sufficient"). Since most Principles are conditional statements, we probably could have seen this coming from the question stem. The correct answer definitely had some challenging language, but it essentially spells out an Illegal Negation, going from "A --> B" to "~A --> ~B", in really fancy language.
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