- Fri Jan 21, 2011 12:00 am
#23061
Complete Question Explanation
Assumption-SN. The correct answer choice is (D)
This is a seemingly confusing argument, which is why it would benefit immensely from a good conditional reasoning diagram:
Answer choice (B): This is the Mistaken Reversal of a central premise of the argument. Since trees have no rights (this is a given), this answer choice is irrelevant and unnecessary for the conclusion to be true.
Answer choice (C): This may seem like an attractive answer at first, since trees are not conscious entities and have no rights. However, that trees have no rights is a given — you need not provide additional support for the premises used in the argument. Even if some unconscious entities had rights, it is still a given that trees do not.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. If we owed an obligation not to cut down trees to some other entity, the author's conclusion would be seriously weakened.
Answer choice (E): Cutting down the trees on someone's property and the corresponding right to do so are both irrelevant considerations and unnecessary for the conclusion to be true.
Assumption-SN. The correct answer choice is (D)
This is a seemingly confusing argument, which is why it would benefit immensely from a good conditional reasoning diagram:
- OBL = obligations
R = rights
OBLT = obligations towards trees
RT = rights of trees
Premise: OBL R (we have no obligations to an entity unless it has rights)
Premise: OBLT RT (if we have obligations towards trees, trees have rights)
Premise: RT (trees have no rights)
======================
Conclusion: OBL (we have no obligation not to cut down trees)
- OBLT → OBL
Answer choice (B): This is the Mistaken Reversal of a central premise of the argument. Since trees have no rights (this is a given), this answer choice is irrelevant and unnecessary for the conclusion to be true.
Answer choice (C): This may seem like an attractive answer at first, since trees are not conscious entities and have no rights. However, that trees have no rights is a given — you need not provide additional support for the premises used in the argument. Even if some unconscious entities had rights, it is still a given that trees do not.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. If we owed an obligation not to cut down trees to some other entity, the author's conclusion would be seriously weakened.
Answer choice (E): Cutting down the trees on someone's property and the corresponding right to do so are both irrelevant considerations and unnecessary for the conclusion to be true.