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Drivers of automobiles over 30 are more likely to purchase digital music & the conception that young people listen to music more in digital form. Comparison is made between purchasing music and listening to music. So, the argument is flawed.

I guess A.
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Bunuel
Drivers of automobiles over 30 are more likely to purchase music in digital format and are more likely to purchase it in larger amounts than are members of any other demographic group. The popular conception that young people listen to more music in digital format than adults must, therefore, be false.

The argument is flawed primarily because the author

(A) fails to distinguish between purchasing and listening
(B) does not supply information about drivers of automobiles under 30
(C) depends on popular belief rather than on documented research findings
(D) does not specify the monetary value of the digital music purchased by any demographic group
(E) discusses music in digital format only rather than music sold in any format

OFFICIAL EXPLANATION:



Reading the question: we'll start each explanation with a description of how might have approached the question, or what your first impression might have been. These impressions will often be different from the ones you had--that's to be expected--but they give a realistic picture of how an expert engages the question. Throughout the book, we'll refer to the "stem" as the final line of text just above the answer choices. Everything above the stem is the "prompt" (because it prompts you, as if every GMAT question gave you a little poke when you started). We can actually start with the question stem. Any order is fair game; you are the ultimately the boss of your GMAT strategy. In 90% or more of Critical Reasoning questions, you'll want to read the prompt and the stem in some order and attempt to create a "filter" (per step one of the strategy) before turning to the answer choices.

Creating a filter: the stem reads, "the argument is flawed primarily because the author..." We can see that our objective is to find a flaw in the argument. Since we have a brief argument, we can employ term matching to compare words in the evidence and the conclusion.



The argument proceeds as if these terms are equal, but they are not. For example, purchasing and listening are not the same thing, but the argument proceeds as if they are. We now have a way to filter the answer choices: we will look for an answer choice that highlights either mismatch as a flaw.

Applying the filter: Choice (A) does this, so (A) may be our answer. Choice (B) states something that isn't really true; if drivers over 30 buy more, drivers under 30 buy less. Choice (C) contradicts the prompt, which presents us with facts, for the purpose of the argument, so (C) is out. Choice (D) is irrelevant to our understanding of this argument. Choice (E) states something that is true but which is not a flaw of the argument, since the argument is about digital music, not other music. We have opted for one answer choice and against for all the others, so we are done.

The correct answer is (A).
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