发现我下载的feifei逻辑地101题没有答案。补充在这里。希望有人整理资料时可以补充进去。原题是来自LSAT Test IV Explained: Section IV Questions 100-101 Zelda: Dr. Ladlow, a research psychologist, has convincingly demonstrated that his theory about the determinants of rat behavior generates consistently accurate predictions about how rats will perform in a maze. On the basis of this evidence, Dr. Ladlow has claimed that his theory is irrefutably correct. Anson: Then Dr. Ladlow is not a responsible psychologist, Dr. Ladlow’s evidence does not conclusively prove that his theory is correct. Responsible psychologists always accept the possibility that new evidence will show that their theories are incorrect. 100. Which one of the following can be properly inferred from Anson’s argument? A. Dr. Ladlow’s evidence that his theory generates consistently accurate predictions about how rats will perform in a maze is inaccurate. B. Psychologists who can derive consistently accurate predictions about how rats will perform in a maze from their theories cannot responsibly conclude that those theories cannot be disproved. C. No matter how responsible psychologists are, they can never develop correct theoretical explanations. D. Responsible psychologists do not make predictions about how rats will perform in a maze. E. Psychologists who accept the possibility that new evidence will show that their theories are incorrect are responsible psychologists.
answer:(B) Anson has taken umbrage at Dr. Ladlow’s conclusion that his theory is “irrefutably correct.” He argues that Dr. Ladlow isn’t a responsible psychologist, because a responsible psychologist would always realize that no theory can be called irrefutable, since new evidence can always come to light. Answer choice (B) essentially restates Anson’s attack on Dr. Ladlow in general terms. Dr. Ladlow didn’t fit Anson’s criterion of a responsible psychologist because he didn’t recognize the possibility that contradictory evidence could refute his theory. Answer choice (B) says that a psychologist who obtains consistent results can’t responsibly conclude that his theory is irrefutable. This is essentially the principle that Anson’s argument rests on, so answer choice (B) can be inferred from Anson’s argument. (A) is a distortion of the argument; Anson doesn’t question the accuracy of Ladlow’s evidence, he just points out the possibility (which Ladlow ignored) that new evidence might turn up. (C) is relatively tricky. Anson doesn’t say that psychologists can never be correct, only that they can never be absolutely sure that they’re correct. For instance, Ladlow’s theory may well be correct, but he can’t responsibly claim to know, beyond a shadow of doubt, that it’s correct. (D) has nothing to do with Anson’s argument. Anson isn’t questioning the content of Ladlow’s experiments, only his conclusion that his theory is irrefutable. (E) makes a familiar error. Anson says: “if a psychologist is responsible, he admits his theory might be disproved.” (E) states: “if a psychologist admits his theory might be disproved, he must be responsible.” But there might be other requirements for a psychologist to be considered responsible. 101. Anson bases his conclusion about Dr. Ladlow on which one of the following? A. an attack on Dr. Ladlow’s character B. the application of a general principle C. the use of an ambiguous term D. the discrediting of facts E. the rejectiion of a theoretical explanation
answer(B) Again we’re asked to understand Anson’s argument, this time in more general terms. On what does Anson base his conclusion about Dr. Ladlow? He says that responsible psychologists always behave a certain way, and since Ladlow does not behave in that way, he is not a responsible psychologist. As (B) observes, he is taking a general principle (about responsible psychology) and applying it to the case of Dr. Ladlow. (A) Anson doesn’t base his argument on an attack against Ladlow’s character. His conclusion could be seen to attack Ladlow’s character, but that conclusion is based on an application of the principle that responsible psychologists admit their fallibility. (C) There’s simply no ambiguous term being used in Anson’s argument; the term “responsible” is the only candidate, and Anson tells us exactly what he means by it. (D) Anson never questions the factual validity of Dr. Ladlow’s evidence, that is, the facts about his rat predictions. As we saw in the previous question, Anson doesn’t attack Ladlow’s actual theory, but Ladlow’s belief that his theory is irrefutable. (E) Again, the theory itself is not the focus of Anson’s argument. Anson never discusses Ladlow’s theoretical explanation of rat behavior. His point isn’t that the theory is wrong, but that it can’t be considered irrefutable.
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