- Fri Jan 21, 2011 12:00 am
#23123
Complete Question Explanation
Method of Reasoning. The correct answer choice is (B)
The philosopher concludes that moral obligations to act in a certain way cannot be derived from the premise that not acting in that way would be unnatural. For instance, it would be absurd to argue that everyone should be a vegetarian just because eating meat might be "unnatural." To defend her claim, the philosopher defines "unnatural" actions in the following way:
Answer choice (A) The philosopher implies that the laws of nature cannot be violated, and accepting the idea of "unnatural" actions is not what violates the laws of nature. This answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. The key term in this argument is "unnatural action." By defining what an unnatural action entails (violation of the laws of nature or a statistical anomaly), the philosopher seeks to demonstrate that unnatural actions cannot be legitimate grounds for moral obligations.
Answer choice (C) The philosopher is not using any statistical findings; she merely states that statistical anomalies cannot be grounds for moral obligations. This answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (D) This is by far the most commonly chosen incorrect answer, since the author does undermine the claim that people can be morally obligated to act in a certain way. However, she never says that this claim is self-contradictory (that would be like saying that "unnatural" actions are actually "moral," or that "moral obligations" are always "unnatural"). This answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (E) The philosopher does not use any empirical evidence to support a claim, let alone distinguish between two definitions of a key term: the key term here ("unnatural action") has only one definition, which is comprised of two necessary conditions ("violation of laws of nature" or "statistical anomaly"). The author has not chosen to adopt one condition over another.
Method of Reasoning. The correct answer choice is (B)
The philosopher concludes that moral obligations to act in a certain way cannot be derived from the premise that not acting in that way would be unnatural. For instance, it would be absurd to argue that everyone should be a vegetarian just because eating meat might be "unnatural." To defend her claim, the philosopher defines "unnatural" actions in the following way:
- Violation of laws of nature
Unnatural action → OR
Statistical anomaly
Answer choice (A) The philosopher implies that the laws of nature cannot be violated, and accepting the idea of "unnatural" actions is not what violates the laws of nature. This answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. The key term in this argument is "unnatural action." By defining what an unnatural action entails (violation of the laws of nature or a statistical anomaly), the philosopher seeks to demonstrate that unnatural actions cannot be legitimate grounds for moral obligations.
Answer choice (C) The philosopher is not using any statistical findings; she merely states that statistical anomalies cannot be grounds for moral obligations. This answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (D) This is by far the most commonly chosen incorrect answer, since the author does undermine the claim that people can be morally obligated to act in a certain way. However, she never says that this claim is self-contradictory (that would be like saying that "unnatural" actions are actually "moral," or that "moral obligations" are always "unnatural"). This answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (E) The philosopher does not use any empirical evidence to support a claim, let alone distinguish between two definitions of a key term: the key term here ("unnatural action") has only one definition, which is comprised of two necessary conditions ("violation of laws of nature" or "statistical anomaly"). The author has not chosen to adopt one condition over another.