- Mon Jun 08, 2020 11:00 pm
#76067
Some of your diagram is not accurate, imho, Yusra. For example, the first claim, that high cost is severely limiting choice, is causal, not conditional. Further, it is not the limited choices that require corporate sponsors, but the high costs that do that, and it is the corporate sponsors that are limiting choice. So it's more like this:
Premises: High Cost Large Corp Sponsors Most Famous Operas
Sub-Conclusion: High Costs cause Limited Choice
New Statement of Opinion that is neither a premise nor a conclusion (because there is no evidence to support it, and it supports nothing): ticket purchasers should decide, not sponsors (and there is nothing conditional about that claim- it's just the author's opinion about what should be the case.) This isn't part of the argument so much as it is a statement that explains why the author is making this argument. It's just his motive.
Conclusion (based on the premises and sub-conclusion above): Reduce Budgets Less Famous Operas
(And this is based on the idea that if we remove the cause of Limited Choice, we will also reduce that effect - it's a conditional claim based on a causal argument, which was itself based on conditional premises. What a tangled web they wove!)
Perhaps you can see why in our original explanation we glossed over the conditional aspects and just took a more holistic approach to trying to understand who this author was and what they wanted to prove?
Premises: High Cost Large Corp Sponsors Most Famous Operas
Sub-Conclusion: High Costs cause Limited Choice
New Statement of Opinion that is neither a premise nor a conclusion (because there is no evidence to support it, and it supports nothing): ticket purchasers should decide, not sponsors (and there is nothing conditional about that claim- it's just the author's opinion about what should be the case.) This isn't part of the argument so much as it is a statement that explains why the author is making this argument. It's just his motive.
Conclusion (based on the premises and sub-conclusion above): Reduce Budgets Less Famous Operas
(And this is based on the idea that if we remove the cause of Limited Choice, we will also reduce that effect - it's a conditional claim based on a causal argument, which was itself based on conditional premises. What a tangled web they wove!)
Perhaps you can see why in our original explanation we glossed over the conditional aspects and just took a more holistic approach to trying to understand who this author was and what they wanted to prove?
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
Follow me on Twitter at https://twitter.com/LSATadam
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
Follow me on Twitter at https://twitter.com/LSATadam