- Thu Dec 22, 2016 6:50 pm
#31571
This problem was the only one I missed in this section. The some / all flaw didn't click with me until after looking up the answers. Thanks for the help Chica and David! It helps me to write out an explanation to myself for missed questions, so here's what I came up with. Feel free to critique!
Premise: Some eloquent speakers impress their audiences...
GES<-S->IA
Premise: Speakers who resort to obscenity are not genuinely eloquent...
RO > ~GES
GES > ~RO
Conclusion: none of these speakers (those who resort to obscenity / are not genuinely eloquent) impress their audiences...
RO > ~IA
IA > ~RO
(~GES > ~IA)
(IA > GES)
The premises do not add up to the conclusion. Just because SOME audiences are impressed with an eloquent speaker does NOT mean that if the audience was impressed, the speaker must have been genuinely eloquent.
________________________
A) Incorrect for two reasons. First, the conclusion is about a certain (some) culture, instead of a sweeping conclusion about all cultures. More importantly, the argument isn't even flawed:
Premise:
MC > MYTH
~MYTH > ~MC
Conclusion:
~MYTH > ~MC
Here, the conclusion is the contrapositive of the premise, and therefore not flawed.
B) Here, the conclusion is also about "some" authors, not "all" authors. Plus, this choice is not flawed. We know that SOME authors both write one page per day AND produce one page per year. Serious authors do not write one page per day. It is safe to conclude that SOME authors who write one book per year must not be serious; we know that because some authors do both (one page / day and one book / year) it stands to reason that at least one of that group must not be serious as they're NOT writing one page per day.
C) The formal logic in this choice is very different from the stimulus. The first premise is an "all" statement, and the conclusion is a "some" statement, both unlike the stimulus. This choice is flawed though. We know if a place is a center of commerce, it must be a center of industry. But this is not to say that if a place is a center of industry, it must be a center of commerce! Therefore, it could be that all centers of commerce are large; all of those large centers of commerce would also be large centers of industry. But a place could be a center of industry without being a center of commerce, so the size of that center of industry is completely independent.
D) The conclusion here uses the word "probably." That's very far off from the definite conclusion we're trying to match.
E) This choice does match the "all" conclusion from the stimulus.
Premise: Sculptors sometimes produce significant works of art...
SCUPLT <-S-> SWA
Premise: Musicians are not sculptors...
MUSC > ~SCULPT
SCULPT > ~MUSC
Conclusion: Musicians (not a sculptor) never produce significant works of art...
MUSC > ~SWA
SWA > ~MUSC
(~SCULPT > ~SWA)
(SWA > SCULPT)
Similar to the stimulus, the argument assumes that if you produce a significant work of art, you must be a sculptor (and if you're not a sculptor, you must not have produced a significant work of art). This assumption is incorrectly based off of the some statement from the first premise. Correct.
Last edited by jw190 on Thu Dec 22, 2016 7:40 pm, edited 1 time in total.