levyyun Wrote:I've read through the explanations, and I have to say that I am more confused than ever. I tried my best to understand all the conditional logic and analogy explanations, but they just made me want to abandon this question and move on.
The main problem I am having is that I still don't understand what exactly I'm looking for/what the problem is with the argument.
And what does it mean by "...does not really exist"? Are we talking about money not being tangible or the fact that it does not have any value? Does it really make a difference which definition I choose?
Answer choice A (to me at least) just seems to be the total opposite of the premise.
Hopefully someone can help me out.
Thanks.
Thanks for posting,
levyyun!
This is certainly a doozy of a question, questioning the very
existence of things in our lives! Talk about some philosophical labyrinths!
Let's return back to the essential core of the argument:
PREMISE: If we stop believing in money, money would disappear
CONCLUSION: Money does not really exist.
First, what does it mean for money to "disappear"? It doesn't really matter here how you define "disappear", as long as it's the same as "does not exist". The author is actually making an argument about the existence of money as a
concept, so the tangibility of physical currency isn't really on the table, but you don't really need to sort this out to answer the question.
So, the author is saying in the premise that if we did a certain thing [stopped believe in money], then a certain result would happen [money would stop existing at that point]. He concludes from that that money does exist at all, even
now. Somehow, he is using the
potential for money to stop existing in the future as evidence that it can't exist
now. Just that characteristic of money is somehow enough to kick it out of the club of
things that exist.
Now, let's take your observation that there's something about
(A) that feels
opposite to the premise. And to a certain extent, you're right! The answer choice is all about something continuing to exist, despite our lack of faith! And the premise said that money would STOP existing if we lost faith! Very opposite results!
But notice, the premise is about what happens to
money, and how
it will stop existing. Answer choice
(A) is about
things that exist, and how
they behave.
So, if we take the premise and
(A) together, what we have is that
money and
things that exist behave completely differently! That would allow us to conclude that
money must not be a
thing that exists! That potential for it to stop existing in the future is now truly enough for us to conclude that it is not in the category of
things that exist!
This is a tough question, in no small part because it's easy to get wrapped up in the actual philosophical question about the existence of things! It's best to resist that temptation, and continue to look at this argument core in the same way we look at every argument core: identify conclusion, identify premise, identify the gap between!
I hope this helps to clear up some confusion on a sticky question!