- Posts: 11
- Joined: Nov 12, 2022
- Sat Nov 02, 2024 9:20 pm
#110332
Hi,
I have a question about the explanation of this question.
It is said in the LRB that to weaken the argument, we must weaken the casual argument implied in the stimulus (i.e., greater number of violent crimes causes more call involving violent crimes).
I disagree with the above weakening the causal argument approach.
Let's assume that there is a statement, "Hot weather induces fearlessness of committing crime for criminals and vigilance for citizens." This would weaken the causal relationship noted above. But, it doesn't weaken the stimulus argument because hot weather still increases crime. Therefore, I think approaching this question as a causation problem and finding the answer based on weakening the causation is not appropriate.
Also, another point that I want to mention is that I focused more on the temporal aspect of the stimulus. While it is stated in the premise "Compared to last year", the conclusion expands the temporal scope to "ever". Regarding this issue, I came up with a potential weakening answer as below:
(1) "3 years ago, there was a 50% decrease in the violent crime rate": If this is true, we can't necessarily say "more likely than ever" because it might be a case where this year's crime rate is lower than that of the past. Such answers attack the temporal shift from "last year" to "ever". Any thoughts on this?
I have a question about the explanation of this question.
It is said in the LRB that to weaken the argument, we must weaken the casual argument implied in the stimulus (i.e., greater number of violent crimes causes more call involving violent crimes).
I disagree with the above weakening the causal argument approach.
Let's assume that there is a statement, "Hot weather induces fearlessness of committing crime for criminals and vigilance for citizens." This would weaken the causal relationship noted above. But, it doesn't weaken the stimulus argument because hot weather still increases crime. Therefore, I think approaching this question as a causation problem and finding the answer based on weakening the causation is not appropriate.
Also, another point that I want to mention is that I focused more on the temporal aspect of the stimulus. While it is stated in the premise "Compared to last year", the conclusion expands the temporal scope to "ever". Regarding this issue, I came up with a potential weakening answer as below:
(1) "3 years ago, there was a 50% decrease in the violent crime rate": If this is true, we can't necessarily say "more likely than ever" because it might be a case where this year's crime rate is lower than that of the past. Such answers attack the temporal shift from "last year" to "ever". Any thoughts on this?