- Sat Apr 23, 2022 7:43 pm
#94979
The argument concludes that the library will be close enough to walk for more users, ashpine, based on the fact that there are more people in the new location. There are a lot of problems with that, including the fact that we don't know if anyone from central Glenwood ever uses the library, or if they would start using it if it was closer to them. It's not necessary that everyone there would use it, but it is necessary that at least someone there would!
Answer A tells us nothing about what would happen if the library was in central Glenwood. It just says that it used to be somewhere else. Did more people use it when it was there? Did people from central Glenwood use it? Was it walkable for anyone? There's just so much we don't know, so it can't help or hurt the argument in any way.
Answer B isn't enough to prove the conclusion, because we still don't know if anyone in central Glenwood would use the library, but it helps because it means there are more people concentrated within the same size space. A higher population density would mean more people could be within walking distance. It's not a great and powerful strengthener, but it does go in the "plus" column for this author.
Adam M. Tyson
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