- Tue Feb 21, 2023 8:30 pm
#99303
Hi queenbee!
Your understanding of the word is in the right ballpark. Perhaps the simplest definition to stick with is that "equivocate" means "to leave ambiguous."
It's certainly possible that someone could leave a term ambiguous for the purposes of deception, to pull the fleece over someone else's eyes. In that case, a speaker might make an argument and then use a term or concept in two different ways, hoping that the listener won't pick up on the shift. It's also possible, though, that a person might make that shift in presenting an argument but does so without knowing it, doing so inadvertently rather than intentionally.
If it's a flaw question and you see the word "equivocate" in one of the answer choices, you can expect that the answer choice is indicating that a word or concept is shifting between different meanings in the stimulus. Thus your understanding of equivocate as "avoiding to commit" also captures the word, i.e., the speaker is avoiding committing to one meaning of a given word/concept and instead shifts between multiple meanings.
In this stimulus, the words "mature enough" are used in the first sentence to refer to being able to accept certain responsibilities of adulthood. This seems to be some sort of ethical or social maturity, that is, it's maturity defined in terms of abilities to accept expected obligations or responsibilities. The next two sentences, however, shift to discussing a physiological "maturing process." It's possible that people might be the first type of mature (able to accept responsibilities) before they are the second type of mature (physiologically developed). It's also possible that people might become the first type of mature only after they are the second type of mature. The fallacy in the stimulus occurs in its final sentence, which brings both of these meanings together without clearly separating or distinguishing them.