PrepTest 87, Section 3, Question 7
Advertisement: Honey Oat Puffs cereal is made with whole-grain oats. Health experts agree that whole-grain oats are among the most healthful foods, far more healthful than most of the foods in a typical diet. So most people would have more healthful diets if they ate Honey Oat Puffs for breakfast.
Advertisement: Honey Oat Puffs cereal is made with whole-grain oats. Health experts agree that whole-grain oats are among the most healthful foods, far more healthful than most of the foods in a typical diet. So most people would have more healthful diets if they ate Honey Oat Puffs for breakfast.
Advertisement: Honey Oat Puffs cereal is made with whole-grain oats. Health experts agree that whole-grain oats are among the most healthful foods, far more healthful than most of the foods in a typical diet. So most people would have more healthful diets if they ate Honey Oat Puffs for breakfast.
Advertisement: Honey Oat Puffs cereal is made with whole-grain oats. Health experts agree that whole-grain oats are among the most healthful foods, far more healthful than most of the foods in a typical diet. So most people would have more healthful diets if they ate Honey Oat Puffs for breakfast.
The reasoning in the advertisement's argument is most vulnerable to criticism on the grounds that the argument
infers that a food will have a certain property simply because one of the food's ingredients has that property
treats a property that is sufficient to make a food healthful as a property that a food must have in order to be healthful
confuses two distinct meanings of the word "healthful"
concludes that a food contributes to health simply because that food tends to be part of the diets of healthy people
contains a premise that presupposes the truth of the conclusion
0 Comments