Hello, GLDMYP,
This question is partially an error of conditional reasoning, so we'll look at that part first. And all errors of conditional reasoning can be simplified into the following:
confusing sufficient and necessary conditions with each other.
This breaks down into Mistaken Reversals (where, if you're given A
B, would be B
A) and Mistaken Negations (where, if you're given A
B, would be Not!A
Not!B), but those are really the same mistake. In much the same way that a conditional reasoning relationship proves its own contrapositive (A
B proves Not!B
Not!A), so too is a Mistaken Reversal the contrapositive of a Mistaken Negation (B
A proves Not!A
Not!B, or it would if B
A was true).
So for this one, it seems that the relatively inexpensive printed books were what allowed the traditional school to begin as an institution. In this way, the books were a sufficient condition (though probably not the
only sufficient condition) for the traditional school to arise. This could be diagrammed like so:
Books
School
Like I said, there are most likely other sufficient conditions for the school, but for now let's ignore those.
The stimulus goes on to say that relatively inexpensive printed books will be gradually fading out of our culture, replaced with electronic media. This could be seen as Not!Books. From this, he asserts, the traditional school will be doomed. This could be diagrammed:
Not!Books
Not!School
Do you see how that's a Mistaken Negation? Just because books are
sufficient to let a traditional school arise doesn't mean they're
necessary for that school to arise.
The other part of this problem is that the argument fails to distinguish between that which a traditional school needs to
arise and that which it needs to
keep on going. Even if relatively inexpensive printed books
were necessary for a traditional school to arise, it doesn't follow that they will remain a permanent requirement of traditional schools. We used to need horses and wagons to move large amounts of things around, but we no longer do.
Hope that helps,
Lucas Moreau
PowerScore