by timmydoeslsat Sun Jul 31, 2011 4:18 pm
The argument begins by talking about what composes the postmodern view.
The argument concludes that WE REALLY DO inhabit a world of no universal truths.
If you really think about this stimulus from an abstract view, you can see it from this light:
The arguer is bringing up a view or school of thought, gives points about what that view involves and how it differs from another view, and how this view has essentially overtaken the old view, but then concludes THAT WE ACTUALLY LIVE in the world that is described by the theory.
How do we know that there will not be a Post-postmodern view of the world? Then the old view will be overtaken just like the modern view was! That would mean that we really did inhabit a world that is described by that one theory.
Also, who knows how many views are out there about the world? There could easily be theories that totally contradict the postmodern view. The author's conclusion is very matter of fact, "It follows that we inhabit a world full of irregular events, and in which there are no universal truths."
Does that conclusion REALLY follow from those premises? No!
We cannot go from ONE theory that has overtaken another theory, with a possibility of that theory being overtaken in the future, and CONCLUDING from this, that something IS ACTUALLY the case, just from a theory.
Other answer choices:
B) The word universal does not shift meanings in this stimulus. It is associated with truth and is describing a totality of the concept of truth.
C) There is no emotion in this argument.
D) The word order is not used ambiguously, which means that the word is not clear or is used in different (inconsistent) ways. Order is used in the same manner, where it means how the universe operates or is governed in a certain manner.
E) It is not a flaw in this case to not cite examples of those modern theories that postmodernism overtook. The arguer talked about the assumptions of modernism that postmodernism rejects. There is no need for the arguer to cite the specifics.