- Mon Feb 05, 2018 11:59 am
#43531
The first sentence is a conclusion. We can tell that it is not a premise because the author says "apparently", meaning he isn't expecting us to accept it as fact but instead as a claim that is supported by another claim, a premise. The second sentence is that premise (actually two premises rolled into one - see below). So, if we restructure the argument we get:
Premise: Seed sales at the two biggest companies went up last year
Premise: Last year there was a spike in produce prices
Conclusion: That spike must have caused more people to plant gardens
You're right that the author never says that seed sales overall have gone up, but that appears to be an assumption necessary for the argument, doesn't it? If seed sales have not increased, then there is no longer any reason to believe that more people are planting gardens! Part of our analysis has to involve identifying what assumptions the author made, because that is where the flaws happen. If there were no assumptions, there would be no flaws, and nothing to weaken!
To weaken this argument you can focus on that assumption and suggest that perhaps overall sales did not increase (which turned out to be at the heart of the correct answer), or it would also be reasonable to attack the causal conclusion, perhaps suggesting that retail sales of seeds can go up for some reason other than more planting (like perhaps people are hoarding seeds in fear of a coming food shortage).
Final note: when you are asked to weaken an argument, that argument has to be imperfect in some way. The author must have done something wrong that we can take advantage of. When you are having trouble figuring out how to weaken an argument, ask yourself what the author did wrong, what was his flaw, and then weaken by pointing it out or otherwise taking advantage of it.
Adam M. Tyson
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