- Wed Sep 06, 2017 5:06 pm
#39280
Hi!
I opted against (E) because I didn't understand why it was necessarily true that West was presupposed that Haynes must have inspected less than 50% of the appliances. I get that, in general, 1) if Haynes had in fact inspected more than 50%, he'd actually be a better-than-average inspector, 2) if he inspected 50%, that'd be exactly what we'd expect of any inspector, and 3) if he inspected less than 50%, he'd seem to be a bad inspector with a disproportionately high defect rate. And I see that Young is saying, "Haynes is actually pretty good!" because Young is using accurate information, making these proportional comparisons correctly. But I don't see why that entails Young is denying a presupposition.
My problem with (E) was that, Why should we assume West's argument is actually about proportionate expectations at all? Yes, if West were comparing Haynes's defection rate to the percentage of the appliances Haynes inspected, West would necessarily be presupposing that less than half of the appliances were inspected by Haynes, in order for his argument to hold. (And then Young simply denies the factual accuracy of that presupposition, destroying the argument.)
But maybe West is just using an entirely different "logic," which is also wrong but for different reasons? Maybe West is just saying, "there are three inspectors, and Haynes is only one of them, so the fact that 50% of the appliances returned were inspected by Haynes makes him a bad inspector, because 50% is higher than the 33% I would have expected." Why are we to charitably assume that West is saying anything sensible at all?
I thought that no matter how Young may interpret West's argument though, in all cases Young clearly is responding that West shouldn't possibly conclude anything as extreme as saying that Haynes is the worst. Maybe Haynes is bad for many reasons, defection rate possibly just one among them, but we know at very least that there's one reason to be less extreme in our condemnation of Haynes. That's why I thought (D) was a better choice than (E).