- Fri May 06, 2016 3:18 pm
#24065
"What we need is an answer that links the sufficient part of our conclusion (important and well written) to our premises in the correct way so that we can follow the arrows in the reasoning chain and end up with our necessary term (promoted) in the conclusion.
Answer (A) does this by linking: (Important -> published) in the correct sufficient/necessary order. The fact that this answer only mentions "important" and not "well written" doesn't matter because it still justifies the argument. In other words, if "important" guarantees that it gets published, the fact that it is also well written doesn't matter."
I'm trying to understand the fact that in a justify question, when we're proving the conclusion 100%, it's ok to choose an answer that has 1 of the 2 terms of the conclusion's compound sufficient condition linked to a premise's sufficient condition to make the logical chain work and reach the necessary condition of the conclusion.
This not having to strictly have both elements of the sufficient condition in play makes me wonder how else it could happen. What if that first premise of this stimulus had a compound sufficient condition, like "if Skiff's book is published this year AND IS MADE AVAILABLE AS AN E-BOOK, Professor Nguyen vows she will urge the dean to promote Skiff." Would answer A still work?
Thanks!
Answer (A) does this by linking: (Important -> published) in the correct sufficient/necessary order. The fact that this answer only mentions "important" and not "well written" doesn't matter because it still justifies the argument. In other words, if "important" guarantees that it gets published, the fact that it is also well written doesn't matter."
I'm trying to understand the fact that in a justify question, when we're proving the conclusion 100%, it's ok to choose an answer that has 1 of the 2 terms of the conclusion's compound sufficient condition linked to a premise's sufficient condition to make the logical chain work and reach the necessary condition of the conclusion.
This not having to strictly have both elements of the sufficient condition in play makes me wonder how else it could happen. What if that first premise of this stimulus had a compound sufficient condition, like "if Skiff's book is published this year AND IS MADE AVAILABLE AS AN E-BOOK, Professor Nguyen vows she will urge the dean to promote Skiff." Would answer A still work?
Thanks!