- Tue Jul 05, 2016 5:25 pm
#26865
Hi johnclem,
Thanks for your question.
I think this is what we have:
Premise: There is no lack of housing units available to rent.
Subordinate conclusion: So the frequent claim that people are homeless because of a lack of available housing is wrong.
Main conclusion: Further government spending to provide low-income housing is not the answer for homelessness.
I can definitely understand why you had a hard time identifying the conclusion here; there is a conclusion indicator word (so) introducing a claim that is not, apparently, the main conclusion, but meanwhile, the conclusion does not have any obvious conclusion indicator word with it.
Remember, though, that sometimes subordinate conclusions (like the one seen here) will have conclusion indicator words present just to let you know that the claim that follows is one that was reached by reasoning, and is not pure evidence (which is just handed to us, is not questioned, and involves no reasoning). That does NOT mean, however, that this claim is necessarily the main conclusion; as we see here, it supporters another, logically dependent claim that increased government spending to provide low-income housing is not a solution to the problem of homelessness.
I hope that helps!
Thanks for your question.
I think this is what we have:
Premise: There is no lack of housing units available to rent.
Subordinate conclusion: So the frequent claim that people are homeless because of a lack of available housing is wrong.
Main conclusion: Further government spending to provide low-income housing is not the answer for homelessness.
I can definitely understand why you had a hard time identifying the conclusion here; there is a conclusion indicator word (so) introducing a claim that is not, apparently, the main conclusion, but meanwhile, the conclusion does not have any obvious conclusion indicator word with it.
Remember, though, that sometimes subordinate conclusions (like the one seen here) will have conclusion indicator words present just to let you know that the claim that follows is one that was reached by reasoning, and is not pure evidence (which is just handed to us, is not questioned, and involves no reasoning). That does NOT mean, however, that this claim is necessarily the main conclusion; as we see here, it supporters another, logically dependent claim that increased government spending to provide low-income housing is not a solution to the problem of homelessness.
I hope that helps!