- Tue Apr 01, 2014 2:42 pm
#14462
Hi!
Thank you for your explanation. I see how answer choice A is correct. But I still don't see how the mechanistic approach was applied since all I know about the mechanistic approach is from the tips on page 4-28 and you stated that the argument didn't really apply those tips. So could you please explain the way the mechanistic approach is used in answer choice A and how "all or none" is a mechanistic way of approaching the argument? Maybe some kind of general definition for the mechanistic approach would help so I can see the bigger picture.
Also, you stated that the tips on page 4-28 were not really applied because the argument is not purely conditional. Does that mean that the mechanistic rules only apply to arguments that contain conditional reasoning?
Thank you again I appreciate it!
Thank you for your explanation. I see how answer choice A is correct. But I still don't see how the mechanistic approach was applied since all I know about the mechanistic approach is from the tips on page 4-28 and you stated that the argument didn't really apply those tips. So could you please explain the way the mechanistic approach is used in answer choice A and how "all or none" is a mechanistic way of approaching the argument? Maybe some kind of general definition for the mechanistic approach would help so I can see the bigger picture.
Also, you stated that the tips on page 4-28 were not really applied because the argument is not purely conditional. Does that mean that the mechanistic rules only apply to arguments that contain conditional reasoning?
Thank you again I appreciate it!