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The correct answer is (D). kevin0214 gave a very convincing analysis.
Answer (C) It is a mistake to take the 300 largest Chinese corporations to be typical of corporate boardrooms generally.
The problem with answer (C) is that while the argument equates the 300 largest corporations with the "most important corporate boardrooms," answer choice (C) equates the 300 largest corporations with "typical corporate boardrooms". This is like comparing apples with oranges, which is never allowed in logic reasoning. There is a difference, no matter how subtle, between the "most important boardrooms" and "typical corporate boardrooms." Therefore, answer choice (C) is out.
Let's take a look at answer (D) The percentage of graduates from Peking University who serve on the boards of the 300 largest Chinese corporations reveals little about the percentage of the members of these boards who are from Peking University.
Interesting. If you read the stimulus carefully, you might realized that the flaw of the argument is -- while only a small percentage of graduates from Peking University eventuall make it to the corporate boardrooms (0.2%, 600 out of 30,0000), it's possible (although highly unlikely in reality) that everyone on a corporate board of 300 largest Chinese corporations (2 board member each, 600 total) could have been a graduate from Peking University. That would lead to the conclusion that Peking University graduates represent 100% of the most important corporate boardrooms in China. Clearly the argument picked the wrong percentage as evidence to support its conclusion
Answer choice (D) best reflects this error in reasoning. |
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