htngo12 wrote:Hi,
I didn't get this argument as I was reading it. The only thing I picked up was the conditional statement of "A judicial system that tries and punishes criminals without delay is an effective deterrent."
As I am rereading the stem, the conclusion states "If potential violent criminals know that being caught means prompt punishment, they will hesitate to break the law."
I disagree with this assessment of the question.
To me the structure of the argument is as follows:
Premise 1: Long drawn out trials (...) Add of criminals feelings of invulnerability.
Premise 2: But if potential violent criminals know that being caught means prompt punishment, they will hesitate to break the law.
Conclusion: A judicial system that tries and punishes criminals without delay is an effective deterrent.
To weaken the argument you prove that the conclusion is incorrect by showing that the conditional statement it contains is untrue. The conditional statement is:
Judicial system punishing swiftly
effective violent crime deterrent.
With answer A it shows that even if a judicial system punishes swiftly, it won't necessarily be an effective deterrent as violent criminals don't always premeditate their crimes.