towardvision Wrote:hmm... this is how I understand the argument.
1. grant this exception> grant many other exceptions to this
ordinance
2. grant many other exceptions to this ordnance> grant exceptions to all manners of other city ordinances
(which he assumes to be anarchy)
conclusion: So if we don't grant this exception, we can avoid anarchy.
A>B
B>C
----
~A> ~C
towardvision Wrote:The problem seems to be that he doesn't provide
any proof why A will cause B, and B will cause C.
mshermn Wrote: It should be, "if want to avoid anarchy, we cannot grant this exception."
towardvision Wrote:For example, if you want to avoid getting fat, you must not eat chocolate"
So that's FAT> Chocolate?
irini101 Wrote:Hi mshermn, could you please give an example of "distort and argument then attack the distorted argument"? So that I could have deeper understanding of (A).
vik Wrote:I think you are wrong. The Senior Guild does make an argument. It is a very simple argument that has only a conclusion (We want an exception to the ordinance) and an implicit premise (Because we say so), similar to the implicit premise in arguments made by every religion.
mshermn Wrote:In the question about the Senior Guild, the conclusion doesn't follow from the premises, and so one way you could describe the error in reasoning is that it assumes it's conclusion to be true - exactly as answer choice (C) states!
goriano Wrote:I've read this thread numerous times, and I still don't understand why assuming a conclusion to be true is the same thing as assuming one event will lead to a particular causal sequence of events (what C states)
towardvision Wrote:Ahh I thought I almost had it.mshermn Wrote: It should be, "if want to avoid anarchy, we cannot grant this exception."
So that seems to be ~C> ~A.
mattsherman Wrote:Ah!!! I know why answer choice (C) is not so appealing for you!!!
Let's look at the following situation. Suppose there is an argument that gives the following claims
A ---> B
B ---> C
----------
C ---> A
If the question were to ask you to identify the error in the reasoning we could say that the argument mistakes a sufficient condition for one that is necessary. But how would you do it topically? Such as "the argument takes for granted that..." or "the argument fails to consider that..."
Well, we would say the argument
takes for granted that all C's are A's
or
fails to consider that some C's are not A's
aznriceboi17 Wrote:Ah ok, that makes sense that Matt's example refers to a hypothetical argument different than the one in the stimulus.
I guess the thing I completely missed in all this discussion, to use the same notation as you just did, is that the stimulus only properly showed that we can conclude C ('we will be granting exceptions to all manner of other city ordinances'), but then goes too far and concludes D (anarchy)?