- Thu Aug 08, 2019 2:34 pm
#67158
We recently received the following question from a student. An instructor will respond below.
I have a somewhat subtle question about a subset of Most Supported By questions.
Some Most Supported By questions provide a set of pieces of evidence, and they ask me to, effectively, deduce what that evidence shows. Those are fine. Others set up conditional chains, and ask me to make an inference supported by that chain. Those are fine too.
Every now and then, though, I am given a Most Supported By question where I am supplied with a premise (or premises) and a conclusion, and I am asked to, basically, infer the missing premise, which is supposedly supported by the remaining premise(s) and the conclusion. These sometimes feel to me more like assumption questions than Must Be True questions, and I wonder whether it is deductively valid to deduce any particular missing premise, given a premise and a conclusion. I'm doing fine on them, but they give me pause, so I thought I would run my thoughts/concerns about them by you.
For example, consider this argument:
Premise: Socrates is a cat
Conclusion: Socrates is mortal
Inferred premise (Most supported): All cats are mortal.
However, aren't there a bunch of different premises you could infer? For instance, "Some cats are mortal, and Socrates happens to be the variety of cat that is mortal?"
I sometimes find that some of the LSAT questions operate in this manner.
For instance, take #5 in section 3 of Preptest 55:
Premise: The star-nosed mole has a nose that ends in a pair of several-pointed stars, or tentacles that are crucial for hunting, as moles are poor-sighted.
Premise: These tentacles contain receptors that detect electric fields produced by other animals.
Conclusion: [These tentacles enable] the moles to detect and catch suitable prey such as worms and insects.
Inferred premise/most supported: Both worms and insects produce electric fields.
For example, here, couldn't you also have the inferred premise be: "The tentacles also pick up low-frequency sounds emitted by worms and insects?" (For what it's worth, this wasn't an option, and the only answer choice that contained a reasonable missing premise was the correct answer.)
I suppose my question boils down to this:
Am I correct that LSAC sometimes considers a reasonable missing premise/assumption of an argument to be "supported by" the remaining premises plus the conclusion, even though the missing premise may not be strictly logically entailed by them, as the Socrates example and mole example may show?