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- 767342
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- 小时
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- 2012-6-5
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- 1970-1-1
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Driver: My friends say I will one day have an accident because I drive my sports car recklessly. But I have done some research, and apparently minivans and larger sedans have very low accident rates compared to sports cars. So trading my sports car in for a minivan would lower my risk of having an accident. The reasoning in the driver's argument is most vulnerable to criticism on the grounds that this argument (A) infers a cause from a mere correlation (B) relies on a sample that is too narrow (C) misinterprets evidence that a result is likely as evidence that the result is certain (D) mistakes a condition sufficient for bringing about a result for a condition necessary for doing so (E) relies on a source that is probably not well-informed Look at this argument: I drive car reckless, so I will have an accident one day. Minivans have low accident rates compared to sports cars. Conclusion: minivans will lower my risk of having an accident. Still again, I think I can infer this conclusion based on the information provided. |
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