- Posts: 3
- Joined: Apr 12, 2023
- Wed Apr 12, 2023 11:04 am
#100830
For this question, I do understand why answer choice A is correct: "Presumes without providing any justification, that the surest way of increasing the overall corrctness of one's beliefs must not hinder one's ability to survive."
I however, chose the very popular incorrect answer choice: B: "Neglects the possibility that even while following the statician's rule, one might also accept new beliefs when new evidence is presented."
The authors conclusion is the the staticians claim must be incorrect because "we need many beliefs in order to survive."
The conclusion introduces an idea that had not been previously mentioned, which is one of the two ways in which a conclusion can be flawed.
When doing descriptive weakening questions, I accept ALL the information in the stimulus ass true? In this case, the statician specifically mentions that one must never change the set of one's beliefs, except by rejecting some of our beliefs in that set when presented with evidence; is answer choice B wrong because it is going against what was said in the stimulus? If one must never change one's set of beliefs, than clearly we must not accept new beliefs when presented with new evidence as answer choice B says.
Help please.
I however, chose the very popular incorrect answer choice: B: "Neglects the possibility that even while following the statician's rule, one might also accept new beliefs when new evidence is presented."
The authors conclusion is the the staticians claim must be incorrect because "we need many beliefs in order to survive."
The conclusion introduces an idea that had not been previously mentioned, which is one of the two ways in which a conclusion can be flawed.
When doing descriptive weakening questions, I accept ALL the information in the stimulus ass true? In this case, the statician specifically mentions that one must never change the set of one's beliefs, except by rejecting some of our beliefs in that set when presented with evidence; is answer choice B wrong because it is going against what was said in the stimulus? If one must never change one's set of beliefs, than clearly we must not accept new beliefs when presented with new evidence as answer choice B says.
Help please.