Information given:- Among adults over 75, 62% of those who suffered three or more falls in the last 12 months walked unsteadily because of joint stiffness and muscle loss, not because of neurological decline
- Therefore, the medical researcher concludes that clinicians should no longer regard a history of frequent falls as evidence that neurological degeneration is beginning
Question:- The researcher's argument is most vulnerable to criticism on which of the following grounds?
Solution:- A: Assumes proving many falls have another cause shows falls never indicate neurological decline.
- Just because many falls have other causes, does not mean no falls are linked to neurological decline
- This is a key unwarranted assumption
- Valid
- B: Ignores that stiff joints and early neurological decline could coexist in some patients
- Points out that the argument overlooks that people can have both musculoskeletal problems and neurological degeneration at the same time
- But falls to get the full scope of the flaw (unlike A)
- Invalid
- C: Takes for granted that “three or more falls” captures every clinically meaningful fall pattern.
- The argument doesn't depend on the threshold being all-inclusive
- Invalid
- D: Presumes the 62 percent figure is inherently large enough to overturn the diagnostic link.
- The problem isn't the size of the number, but rather the assumption that having a common alternative cause means falls are no longer diagnostic at all
- Invalid
- E: Overlooks that participants may have been selected precisely because of musculoskeletal problems.
- Suggests a sampling flaw, but the core vulnerability is the assumption in A
- Invalid
Answer: A, Assumes proving many falls have another cause shows falls never indicate neurological decline.Bunuel
Medical Researcher: Among adults over 75, 62 percent of those who suffered three or more falls in the last 12 months walked unsteadily because of joint stiffness and age-related muscle loss, not because of neurological decline. Therefore, clinicians should no longer regard a history of frequent falls as evidence that neurological degeneration is beginning.
The researcher's argument is most vulnerable to criticism on which of the following grounds?
(A) Assumes proving many falls have another cause shows falls never indicate neurological decline.
(B) Ignores that stiff joints and early neurological decline could coexist in some patients.
(C) Takes for granted that “three or more falls” captures every clinically meaningful fall pattern.
(D) Presumes the 62 percent figure is inherently large enough to overturn the diagnostic link.
(E) Overlooks that participants may have been selected precisely because of musculoskeletal problems.