- Fri Aug 12, 2016 5:43 pm
#27773
That's what we're looking for! With a look into your reasoning and your approach we can provide better feedback that should be more useful to you than just a general response.
First, I think your analysis of S's argument is sound and accurate. Nice work.
Next, I think you've begun to go a little astray in ascribing a conclusion to W. In a Method of Reasoning argument, you are looking at a question type that is in the "Prove" family, like a Must Be True question. That means you need to stick with what was in the stimulus and not bring in any outside information. Here, the conclusion that you have assumed W to be supporting is just that, an assumption on your part, an inference that you have drawn. It's a reasonable one, and probably true, but don't let that cloud your analysis of what actually happened.
I'm not sure about your prephrase here - it seems that maybe you have let your belief about what W might conclude influence you a little bit. Is W arguing against S's evidence? S says that scientists disagree about how much warming has occurred - does W dispute that? I don't think so. Rather, she focuses not on the disagreement (over how much) but on what they do agree on (warming is happening within some agreed-upon range). In the absence of a conclusion, I think it's fair to say that W isn't arguing at all, just presenting additional information. Sure, she might be about to make an argument, but maybe not. In any case, she didn't make one, so a more accurate prephrase might be that she presented new evidence that S may not have considered.
With that in mind, the answers that at first seemed attractive may now appear to be less so. A, for example - did W actually dispute that scientists disagree about the amount of warming? Nope - her claims are totally consistent with that idea, although she puts it into a larger context (they don't all agree on the amount, but they do agree that it fits within a certain range). In answer C, do we have battling authorities here? Does S cite someone who says one thing and then W cite someone else who says something in opposition to that? Nope. S cites scientists as a group and says that within the group there is disagreement about how much. W cites an organization that puts those disagreements in a larger context, without actually disagreeing with any particular scientist. No conflicting views here, just different context.
So what's this perspective thing? W is implicitly conceding that not every scientist agrees on the exact amount, but they do agree on a range - the perspective is larger, more global, about the scientific community rather than between individual scientists. While some may say 1.5 degrees and others say 4.5 degrees and still others fall somewhere in between, W tells us that they would pretty much all agree that it is no less and no more than those two extremes.
Take another look at what W says, and what she does not say, and see if that makes some sense.
Adam M. Tyson
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