- Fri Feb 19, 2016 1:11 pm
#22181
Mr. Killoran,
I had a question about your description of assumption questions in the Logical Reasoning Bible. From pages 260-273 of the 2013 edition, you go into the details of assumption questions and conditional reasoning. On page 262 and 273, you discuss supporter assumptions and the two different types of assumption answer choices respectively. My question is how do supporter assumptions and the first type of assumption answer choice that you discuss on page 273 differ from justify questions? In your discussion on page 262, you describe supporter assumptions as elements in the stimulus that fill logical gaps in the argument, and then on page 273 you mention that the correct answer choice fills in a missing link in the chain of logic. Isn't this exactly what a justify question does though? I understand the defender assumption type pretty well, since this type of assumption rules out possibilities or other considerations, but I am having a hard time separating the supporter assumption type and a regular old justify question. Problem set question number 1 on page 283 further clarifies my question, since the correct answer choice *seems* like it meets the threshold of what would be sufficient to make the argument a valid one. Hopefully this wasn't too confusing, and thanks very much for your time.
Respectfully,
Kyle
I had a question about your description of assumption questions in the Logical Reasoning Bible. From pages 260-273 of the 2013 edition, you go into the details of assumption questions and conditional reasoning. On page 262 and 273, you discuss supporter assumptions and the two different types of assumption answer choices respectively. My question is how do supporter assumptions and the first type of assumption answer choice that you discuss on page 273 differ from justify questions? In your discussion on page 262, you describe supporter assumptions as elements in the stimulus that fill logical gaps in the argument, and then on page 273 you mention that the correct answer choice fills in a missing link in the chain of logic. Isn't this exactly what a justify question does though? I understand the defender assumption type pretty well, since this type of assumption rules out possibilities or other considerations, but I am having a hard time separating the supporter assumption type and a regular old justify question. Problem set question number 1 on page 283 further clarifies my question, since the correct answer choice *seems* like it meets the threshold of what would be sufficient to make the argument a valid one. Hopefully this wasn't too confusing, and thanks very much for your time.
Respectfully,
Kyle