- Posts: 4
- Joined: Jul 13, 2024
- Fri Jul 19, 2024 5:02 pm
#107733
Rachel,
You are right, but unless i'm wrong that only demonstrated that it is possible for John to have the schedule he describes without assuming E, when the stimulus is asking for us to make it so that the argument MUST be true. It is equally possible for him to have the same schedule without assuming D either, but that doesn't mean we don't have to assume D. The issue is the stimulus asks which must be assumed - it needs an assumption which necessitates its conclusion, which I demonstrated both E and D are required for. If it is possible for John to have not worked at the insurance company Monday through Thursday, then the argument is false - it said that he must work those days. So I agree that your arrangement is possible, but it only shows that its possible that he worked those days, which isn't the strength of conclusion the stimulus asks for.
Am I missing something here? Must means that no alternative exists which meets all of the conditions, and unless we assume both D and E, no such alternative exists.
You are right, but unless i'm wrong that only demonstrated that it is possible for John to have the schedule he describes without assuming E, when the stimulus is asking for us to make it so that the argument MUST be true. It is equally possible for him to have the same schedule without assuming D either, but that doesn't mean we don't have to assume D. The issue is the stimulus asks which must be assumed - it needs an assumption which necessitates its conclusion, which I demonstrated both E and D are required for. If it is possible for John to have not worked at the insurance company Monday through Thursday, then the argument is false - it said that he must work those days. So I agree that your arrangement is possible, but it only shows that its possible that he worked those days, which isn't the strength of conclusion the stimulus asks for.
Am I missing something here? Must means that no alternative exists which meets all of the conditions, and unless we assume both D and E, no such alternative exists.