- Fri Mar 20, 2015 1:18 am
#18327
This is another question that connects with assumptions so please bare with me. I understand that within weaken type questions we do not directly attack the conclusion but rather we show how the conclusion does not logically follow from a set of premises. The most prevalent way this is often done within weaken type questions is by analyzing the assumption and picking an answer choice that undermines it. The answer choice tends to be "new"/alternative information that undermines the assumption and thus the argument as a whole.
The other types of assumptions that take place are causal and conditional statement related. When the causal statement is in the conclusion, the author has assumed that the cause stated is the only cause to allow the event/effect to take place. Our purpose is to reveal this flawed assumption by bringing in 1 of 5 other assumption possibilities such as reversal of stated relationship in order to weaken the existing assumption.
Conditional statements within the conclusion revolve around an assumption as well since the author assumes that the necessary condition must take place if the sufficient occurs. To weaken such an assumption, we must provide an alternative interpretation to the assumption where the necessary condition is not required, which as a result will weaken the preexisting assumption and thus the argument.
HOWEVER, the Flaw in the Reasoning chapter lists many different types of flaws that weaken the argument, which some tend to not be based around the unstated premise, but instead text formation, structure, and many other elements. So, can a weaken question involve these flaws as well? If not, is this the reason as to why weaken questions are separated from flaw questions? Also, if weaken questions do involve all flaws from the flaw in the reasoning chapter, are they often rare?
The other types of assumptions that take place are causal and conditional statement related. When the causal statement is in the conclusion, the author has assumed that the cause stated is the only cause to allow the event/effect to take place. Our purpose is to reveal this flawed assumption by bringing in 1 of 5 other assumption possibilities such as reversal of stated relationship in order to weaken the existing assumption.
Conditional statements within the conclusion revolve around an assumption as well since the author assumes that the necessary condition must take place if the sufficient occurs. To weaken such an assumption, we must provide an alternative interpretation to the assumption where the necessary condition is not required, which as a result will weaken the preexisting assumption and thus the argument.
HOWEVER, the Flaw in the Reasoning chapter lists many different types of flaws that weaken the argument, which some tend to not be based around the unstated premise, but instead text formation, structure, and many other elements. So, can a weaken question involve these flaws as well? If not, is this the reason as to why weaken questions are separated from flaw questions? Also, if weaken questions do involve all flaws from the flaw in the reasoning chapter, are they often rare?