Statements A, B, C, D and F correctly describe major types of reasoning and their role in UGC NET questions, while E is false. Analogical, causal and authority-based arguments, as well as statistical generalisations, are all recognised and commonly tested reasoning patterns. Exam questions often ask candidates to identify which of these patterns is being used. E is incorrect because it ignores the widespread use of causal and statistical reasoning in both theory and test practice.
Option A:
Option A is correct because it includes all the true statements and excludes E, which wrongly narrows the class of acceptable arguments. It draws attention to the diversity of reasoning types and to the requirement in Paper 1 to distinguish among them. Thus this option is consistent with both logical classification and exam design.
Option B:
Option B is incomplete since it omits F, overlooking the explicit connection between these reasoning types and the format of UGC NET questions. While A, B, C and D are true, without F the answer fails to mention how such distinctions are tested. Therefore this combination is not fully adequate.
Option C:
Option C is wrong because it leaves out A, which gives the definition of an analogical argument, and includes only B, C, D and F. Without A, the set does not cover all the listed reasoning types, so it cannot be the complete collection of correct statements. Hence this option is insufficient.
Option D:
Option D is incorrect because it admits E, which dismisses causal and statistical arguments as unrecognised, contradicting standard logical and methodological practice. Including E alongside otherwise accurate descriptions undermines the overall correctness of the combination.
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