- Mon Nov 13, 2023 12:57 pm
#103980
Hi Karl,
Based on your comments, I think that you may be going about this question the wrong way.
This is a strengthen question. The question asks "Which one of the following, if true, most justifies the stated application of the principle?"
"Most justifies" is what indicates that it is a strengthen question.
For the purpose of doing this question, you can think of the principle as the premises of the argument and the application as the conclusion. You are trying to find an answer that, if true, helps you get from the premises (the principle) to the conclusion (the application).
It's important to realize that you are accepting the answers as true. Your comment that "There are many issues relevant to Terry that are surely relevant to the majority in the meeting" directly contradicts what this answer is stating.
Instead, you should ask yourself, if Answer C is true, and there aren't any things that are relevant to Terry that are relevant to the majority, how would that affect the conclusion (the application).
By plugging in Answer C into the argument, it supports the conclusion (in other words, the application).
If meetings only discuss issues relevant to the majority (the first sentence in the principle) and nothing relevant to the majority is also relevant to Terry (Answer C), then nothing relevant to Terry will be discussed at the meeting. From the second sentence in the principle, if none of the issues discussed in the meeting are relevant to that person, then that person should not be required to attend.
This gets you to the conclusion that Terry should not be required to attend the meeting.