dhlim3 Wrote:
Maybe I'm the only idiot here that picked E ("Whatever is true of money is true of financial markets generally.").
I thought E was definitely part of the core and the argument centered around how the behavior of the financial market is analogous to the behavior of money.
How I read the argument:
PREMISE 1: All that would be needed to make money disappear would be a universal loss of belief in it.
PREMISE 2: Fluctuations in financial markets are the results of mere beliefs of investors.
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CONCLUSION: Money does not exist.
I understand that Premise 2 does not mention anything about the existence explicitly, but I understood it as since extreme downward fluctuation can eventually lead to the "disappearance of its value", I somehow thought it was relevant to the discussion of existence. Is this a stretch?
Also, if I'm wrong about categorizing the last sentence about the financial markets as premise, what is the proper role that it plays? Intermediary conclusion? Or is it a premise that supports PREMISE 1 (which in turn would actually make PREMISE 1 an intermediary conclusion)?
I can kind of see why E is wrong, not because it is out of scope but because it has the relationship reversed (It's saying: Money -> Financial Market, but the argument actually assumes Financial Market -> Money). If the answer choice E instead had said, "Whatever is true of financial markets generally is true of money", could this have been a valid answer?
Nah I made the same mistake first time around. Chose A almost immediately on blind review even though I had for some reason crossed it off initially. I picked E because I thought, "the argument is saying money has this characteristic (not existing) because it's parallel to financial markets, but he doesn't explicitly say that, hence the missing assumption." But I think there are two problems: (1) like you said, the assumption should have been "what's true of financial markets = true of money," AND (2) the analogy isn't the conclusion. The conclusion is "money does not really exist."
SO…that in mind, I chose A because the first two sentences entirely. IF the only thing needed to make $$ disappear would be for everyone to not believe in it, which he says is proof that money doesn't exist, THEN he has to be assuming (a) that things that DO exist continue existing regardless of belief, while (b) things that DO NOT exist do not continue existing without universal belief. Thus, choice A fits option (a) of the assumption: if anything (everything) that exists will do so even if universal belief ceases, that means that things that would go away (i.e., money) if belief ceased are not among the group of things that exist. Aka, conclusion.
EDIT: and to answer your questions, I think the financial markets thing is honestly irrelevant. I just saw it (second time) as a supporting analogy, not as a premise. The only premise we are given is "if people stopped believing in money, it would go away." The missing premise is the right answer choice: "anything that [truly] exists it will exist regardless of belief." Therefore, something that does not exist regardless of belief is not something that [truly] exists.