quiaitaque
Ishaan30, I too believe the answer is C as the argument seems to conclude that the number of teen suicides that are reported to be on a declining trend owing to the reduction in the percentage of teen suicides in Travonia. But this goes against a crucial concept of associating a delcine in percentage to a decline in the Absolute Value of the Population. Hence, Statement C is most vulnerable to the argument.
However, I was on edge with Answer D since the statment "
It overlooks the possibility that the total number of deaths increased" also resonates with the concept of Percentage V Absolute Values. That is as the increase in the total number of deaths was not considered, it resulted in confusion over whether the reduction in percentage of teen suicides meant a decline in such cases or not.egmat : Would appreciate a clarification over this doubt. quiaitaqueLooking at your analysis, you've done an excellent job identifying the core flaw in the argument - the confusion between percentage and absolute values. Your reasoning for choosing
C is spot-on! Let me help clarify why
D doesn't work here.
The Critical Distinction: "Deaths" vs. "Suicides"You're absolutely right that both
C and
D touch on the percentage vs. absolute value concept. However, there's a crucial scope difference:
Option C: "...decrease in the percentage of
teen suicides necessarily signifies a decrease in the number of
teen suicides"
→ This directly addresses the argument's flaw about
suicide statisticsOption D: "...the total number of
deaths in Travonia has increased"
→ This refers to
ALL deaths (from any cause - accidents, disease, natural causes, etc.)
Why This Matters:The argument is specifically about
suicides and their distribution among different age groups. The author states:
- Overall
suicide incidence has increased dramatically
- Teen
suicides dropped from \(65\%\) to \(30\%\) of all
suicides- Concludes certain types of
suicides haven't increased
The argument already acknowledges that total
suicides have increased ("increased dramatically"). So the flaw isn't about overlooking an increase - it's about misinterpreting what a percentage decrease means when the total has increased.
Quick Test:If we knew the total number of
all deaths in Travonia (from all causes), would it help evaluate whether teen suicide
numbers decreased? No - we'd still need to know the total number of
suicides specifically.
Key Takeaway for Similar Questions:When evaluating answer choices, pay close attention to the
exact scope of terms used:
- "Deaths" ≠ "Suicides"
- "All deaths" is a much broader category than "all suicides"
- The correct answer will precisely target the argument's actual scope
Your instinct about the percentage vs. absolute value flaw was perfect - just remember to match the
exact population being discussed in the argument!