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Bunuel
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Hey! the flaw pattern in the original argument is that
a person claims something;
an expert provides a counter claim;
so the author says the former person's claim is false.

This structure is very clearly visible in D.
In C there is no expert.

D3N0
Confused between C and D. Why C is wrong?
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So it was about the expert, and I thought any second person could be used for the pattern. :D
select the one closest to the argument.
nishantswaft
Hey! the flaw pattern in the original argument is that
a person claims something;
an expert provides a counter claim;
so the author says the former person's claim is false.

This structure is very clearly visible in D.
In C there is no expert.

D3N0
Confused between C and D. Why C is wrong?
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Bunuel KarishmaB MartyMurray
Can you please confirm which kind of fallacy is this? Is this appeal to authority or appeal to popular opinion?

In the stimulus, i can see that critical reviews are mentioned which can be appeal to authority where expert opinion matters. If i go with such kind of reasoning, then A can also be the answer (assuming that the supervisor is an an expert which on the other hand might not be a correct assumption.)

Now if consider critical reviews as appeal to popular opinion, then D seems fine to me.

Additionally, do we also have to check whether the number of opinions matches for both stimulus and option? In stimulus, we can see there are multiple critical reviews, and in option D we have multiple opinion which is not the case with option A.

Please help
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btsaami
Bunuel KarishmaB MartyMurray
Can you please confirm which kind of fallacy is this? Is this appeal to authority or appeal to popular opinion?

In the stimulus, i can see that critical reviews are mentioned which can be appeal to authority where expert opinion matters. If i go with such kind of reasoning, then A can also be the answer (assuming that the supervisor is an an expert which on the other hand might not be a correct assumption.)

Now if consider critical reviews as appeal to popular opinion, then D seems fine to me.

Additionally, do we also have to check whether the number of opinions matches for both stimulus and option? In stimulus, we can see there are multiple critical reviews, and in option D we have multiple opinion which is not the case with option A.

Please help

This is a case of 'generalizing from specific examples' or more particularly, 'generalizing from so-called experts' opinions'

But subjective claims are just opinions, even if they belong to the 'experts' of the field.
If experts claim something is pretty/interesting/tasty, it doesn't mean that everyone else should feel the same way about it. One cannot generalize.
This is the error in the original argument and replicated in (D) only.
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