- Fri Jan 13, 2017 3:39 pm
#32074
Hi!
For this assumption question, I had a hard time with finding an necessary answer for the conclusion to be true.
For the argument:
Premise1: Large-scale government projects are designed to benefit everyone -usually benefit some segment of society.
Premise2: The more equally and widely political power is distributed among citizenry, the less likely projects are to receive funding.
Conclusion: Gov't by referendum tends to diminish, not enhance society.
I picked (B) as my answer, but when I reevaluated my decision, it did make any sense.
With answer (A), only tying Premise 1 to the conclusion made more sense. Should I have evaluated Premise 2 as irrelevant to the argument?
For this assumption question, I had a hard time with finding an necessary answer for the conclusion to be true.
For the argument:
Premise1: Large-scale government projects are designed to benefit everyone -usually benefit some segment of society.
Premise2: The more equally and widely political power is distributed among citizenry, the less likely projects are to receive funding.
Conclusion: Gov't by referendum tends to diminish, not enhance society.
I picked (B) as my answer, but when I reevaluated my decision, it did make any sense.
With answer (A), only tying Premise 1 to the conclusion made more sense. Should I have evaluated Premise 2 as irrelevant to the argument?