- Tue Aug 23, 2022 6:44 pm
#96863
Hi Mazen,
Worry not, I am here to help!
Firstly, the category of yes or no is typically always binary, so that here, the category at issue is cultivated or not, splitting the entire population of apples into two. Notice that this is simply one attribute apples may have, their color for example, can be yellow, green, or red, so that there are clearly other, and non-binary, classifications of apples. However, when looking through the lens of any give classification, specifically one which is binary, then the other categories are ignored for the purpose of that particular comparison.
Answer choice C attempts to create a binary category with respect to size. This particular category is irrelevant to the argument at hand. The author's does not assume this category (implicitly create it), and the author's argument also does not rely upon it. The specific division of size between big and small is not at issue in this argument. The idea is that cultivated apples are bigger in a relative sense, but not in an absolute categorical sense. Apples, in practice, might vary in size significantly, albeit only relatively speaking, that is within a general frame of reference to apple sizing. A similar analogy may be used with human sizing; there are humans less than five feet tall, but larger than seven and a half feet tall. The variation is such that, in an absolute sense, it is not meaningful to create a binary category of big or small, or even big or not big, especially considering that most human height is determined by a secondary category, sex, and skews toward a median (5'5" and 5'10").
Let me know if this not clear, but basically the issue is big or small is not the right category to use here, and its imposition in this argument is irrelevant to the argument's validity. But I'm happy to explain this further if needed.