Hi all,
for anyone still who confused on how A is "Reversed" I can try my hand at it:
Since this is a rebuttal of an opposing argument, we should proceed by outlining the two opposing views' evidence + conclusion
Critics' Evidence
news reports damage confidence + damaged confidence leads to
reduced spending
Critics' Conclusion
therefore, news reports damage the economy (the implied assumption being that
reduced spending leads to a harmed economy
Author's evidence
there's actually a study that said that people's spending correlates with their personal economy
Author's conclusion
therefore, the critics are mistake [that negative news reports harm the economy]
Starting with the conclusion - we have to recognize it's extremely strong. It basically says there is zero way for negative news reports to damage the economy. We know that that is a ridiculous claim to make, and one even harder to prove. So how does the author try and prove it? By countering evidence: they're claiming, "no, it's not negative reports [which damage confidence] that causes
reduced spending, it's actually people's individual economy that leads to
reduced spending"
So we have two seemingly conflicting ideas: which one causes reduced spending? Is it the negative news reports? or is it people's individual economy?
Here's the key:
for the author's argument to work, AKA for them to conclude entirely that "negative news reports can't harm the economy
at all", they entirely need to believe that the "influencer" of people's spending, is people's individual economy. Otherwise, how would the conclusion be so strong, and how would the critics be so mistaken? This is an essential,
implied and unstated part of the argument
So let's say we have to be absolutely sure that people's individual economy is the number one thing that influences spending. Well then how would point out a flaw in the author's argument?
Well what if damaged confidence from news reports, CAUSES you to pay more attention to your individual economy? That's a smart counter, because the chain would then look like this
negative news reports
damaged confidence
more individual economy observations reduction in personal spending (aka economy bad)
Now, ultimately the critics WOULDN'T be mistaken, because the very first "cause" of the bad economy, is now the negative news reports. D fits that.
A does not, and A doesn't harm the argument in any way (remember, we're looking for something the argument FAILED to do). If individual economy caused you to see the larger economy in a certain way, then ultimately, the author would be even more correct (plug it back into the chain above). The "ultimate" or "first" cause, would be people paying attention to their individual economy first, which would then affect how you perceive news reports/the larger economy overall.