sukim764 Wrote:I think you're overlooking a critical element within this question. Firstly, the language of the conclusion suggests a causal relationship, rather than a correlation, between regulatory standards and the amount of money banks were able to loan.
I think it is important to note here that no causal relationship is directly stated. Maybe the conclusion implies it but so what? The conclusion doesn't follow from the premises so this is kind of counterintuitive to our mission. We cannot ever use what the conclusion says as a logical reason to believe one thing or another. The conclusion of all assumption family questions is inherently flawed - that's the point!
Here is the way I saw this
necessary assumption question.
Prior to the downturn, regulatory standards were tightened
perhaps causing the banks to loan less money.
→
If those standards are relaxed, banks will
lend more moneyLet's analyze what this argument is saying. It is saying that banks loaned less money in the past but, now that a
potential reason for them loaning less money will no longer be present, there is "clearly" a reason to believe that "banks will lend more money." That makes sense but there are some gaps.
Alexander93 Wrote:1) Banks have enough capital to loan more money
2) Banks want to loan more money
3) There are enough people who want these loans
I really like the assumptions that you pointed out here. I think that these thought processes are pretty adequate for attacking this question. Namely though, this argument is assuming that the banks are in the
financial position to
be able to lend more money. If they are
not in the financial position, then how could it be possible that they lend more money? It cannot. Thus, we need to assume that they have that money.
(A) is the answer that most adequately speaks to this assumption. Look at this negated:
"The downturn
did cause a significant decrease in the total amount of money [in] the source of funds for banks to lend."
So does this
completely destroy the argument? No. However, the negation test is often misunderstood. We are not trying to destroy the
conclusion and make it completely impossible. We are trying to weaken the link between the premises and the conclusion, ultimately making it so that the conclusion doesn't follow
from the premises. I also think that the word "significant" is meaningful here. No, "significant" does not mean "sufficient," but it surely means that it is something that has particular consequences.
(B) is, in my opinion,
the tricky answer. However, one may to eliminate it is to simply revisit the scope. We are not concerned with the
causes of the economic downturn. In fact, the economic downturn is not even that relevant to the argument other than putting it into a particular context. The important parts are talking about the regulatory standards.
(C) Similar to (B), we don't care
why the regulatory standards were tightened. The point is that they were and we are using that as the basis of our conclusion.
everythinginitsrightplace23 Wrote:could you explain how answer D is irrelevant to the argument? I can see how if it is assumed, then it contradicts the argument, but I am confused as to why it wouldn't weaken it as opposed to being irrelevant, which I take to mean out of scope?
I don't know if I would go as far to say that it is
irrelevant to the
argument but it certainly is not a
necessary assumption. Look at how strong that language is: "
no economic downturn..." This is way out of of the scope of the argument, which is talking about one specific economic downturn. In addition, as Matt has stated above, the premise clearly says that "during the recent economic downturn...banks loaned less money." This answer choice is saying that "There is not even one economic downturn that was accompanied by banks loaning less money." This is directly contradictory.
However, the economic downturn itself is not
relevant to the
core, and I think that is what people are saying when they deem it "irrelevant." The economic downturn doesn't matter for the premise-conclusion link.
(E) We don't care about the "effects of the downturn" and this is not remotely relevant to the core.