PrepTest 40, Section 2, Question 12

Difficulty: 
Passage
Game

Several legislators claim that the public finds many current movies so violent as to be morally offensive. However, these legislators have misrepresented public opinion. In a survey conducted by a movie industry guild, only 17 percent of respondents thought that movies are overly violent, and only 3�percent found any recent movie morally offensive. These low percentages are telling, because the respondents see far more current movies than does the average moviegoer.

Several legislators claim that the public finds many current movies so violent as to be morally offensive. However, these legislators have misrepresented public opinion. In a survey conducted by a movie industry guild, only 17 percent of respondents thought that movies are overly violent, and only 3�percent found any recent movie morally offensive. These low percentages are telling, because the respondents see far more current movies than does the average moviegoer.

Several legislators claim that the public finds many current movies so violent as to be morally offensive. However, these legislators have misrepresented public opinion. In a survey conducted by a movie industry guild, only 17 percent of respondents thought that movies are overly violent, and only 3�percent found any recent movie morally offensive. These low percentages are telling, because the respondents see far more current movies than does the average moviegoer.

Several legislators claim that the public finds many current movies so violent as to be morally offensive. However, these legislators have misrepresented public opinion. In a survey conducted by a movie industry guild, only 17 percent of respondents thought that movies are overly violent, and only 3�percent found any recent movie morally offensive. These low percentages are telling, because the respondents see far more current movies than does the average moviegoer.

Question
12

The reasoning in the argument is flawed in that the argument

attempts to undermine the legislators' credibility instead of addressing their argument

bases its conclusion on subjective judgments rather than on an objective criterion of moral offensiveness

fails to consider the possibility that violent movies increase the prevalence of antisocial behavior

generalizes from a sample that is unlikely to be representative of public sentiment

presumes, without providing justification, that the people surveyed based their responses on a random sampling of movies

D
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