- Fri Jun 03, 2022 1:36 pm
#95631
Hi,
I think this question hasn't yet been brought up here because the wrong answers are clearly wrong and the right answer seems to fit well (i.e. it's relatively easy), but despite the fact that I got this one right, I wanted some clarification on the reasoning.
In short, I feel like answer E is more of a Strengthen or Justify answer, not a necessary assumption. Let me know if my reasoning is wrong here.
Although you could argue answer E doesn't make the conclusion 100% true (one could debate what warrants hastiness), I nevertheless feel like the answer is not an implicit assumption within the argument; rather it seems to simply strengthen the conclusion. Given historical evidence that anticapitalist measures have resulted in improved democratization, it would be hasty to criticize similar efforts by governments in certain countries IF those countries were in the midst of transitions away from totalitarianism and towards democracy. The truth of answer E supports the conclusion, but it doesn't seem to me that the author is assuming the truth of answer E. To me, the underlying assumption of the argument was that because anticapitalist developments have had positive effects for democracy in the past, anticapitalist developments do not always deserve criticism, despite their apparent antithetical relationship to democracy. In other words, because action X has not always been a bad thing, it is undue to oppose action X in the present. A principle that states this concept might have instead been the correct "necessary" assumption, in my view.
Anyway, just wondering if my reasoning is off on this?
I think this question hasn't yet been brought up here because the wrong answers are clearly wrong and the right answer seems to fit well (i.e. it's relatively easy), but despite the fact that I got this one right, I wanted some clarification on the reasoning.
In short, I feel like answer E is more of a Strengthen or Justify answer, not a necessary assumption. Let me know if my reasoning is wrong here.
Although you could argue answer E doesn't make the conclusion 100% true (one could debate what warrants hastiness), I nevertheless feel like the answer is not an implicit assumption within the argument; rather it seems to simply strengthen the conclusion. Given historical evidence that anticapitalist measures have resulted in improved democratization, it would be hasty to criticize similar efforts by governments in certain countries IF those countries were in the midst of transitions away from totalitarianism and towards democracy. The truth of answer E supports the conclusion, but it doesn't seem to me that the author is assuming the truth of answer E. To me, the underlying assumption of the argument was that because anticapitalist developments have had positive effects for democracy in the past, anticapitalist developments do not always deserve criticism, despite their apparent antithetical relationship to democracy. In other words, because action X has not always been a bad thing, it is undue to oppose action X in the present. A principle that states this concept might have instead been the correct "necessary" assumption, in my view.
Anyway, just wondering if my reasoning is off on this?