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#22918
Complete Question Explanation

Justify the Conclusion-SN. The correct answer choice is (C)

Whenever the stimulus begins by outlining someone else's argument, you can be sure that the author's conclusion will be the exact opposite of theirs. The best approach for understanding the gist of the stimulus is to simplify its premises and conclusions and quickly diagram the conditional relationships that underlie them. It is crucial to focus only on the most important aspects of the argument and not get distracted by unnecessary details (such as why freedom of thought might arguably be a precondition for intellectual progress):
  • Premise: ..... Intellectual Progress .......... Intellectual Discipline (IP requires ID)

    Conclusion: ..... Intellectual Progress .......... Freedom of Thought (FT not necessary for IP)
The conclusion only follows if intellectual discipline and freedom of thought were incompatible with one another, i.e. if intellectual discipline precludes freedom of thought (or, alternatively, if freedom of thought precludes intellectual discipline). A quick scan through the five answer choices reveals that only answer choice (C) matches this description.

Answer choice (A): By implying that intellectual discipline might hinder intellectual progress, this answer choice actually weakens the author's conclusion and is therefore incorrect.

Answer choice (B): What value a society places on intellectual progress is irrelevant to this argument, and placing a high value on such progress is certainly not required to justify the conclusion. This answer choice is incorrect.

Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice. If freedom of thought and intellectual progress are mutually exclusive, i.e. if the presence of one invariably leads to the absence of the other, the conclusion that freedom of thought is not a precondition for intellectual progress is fully justified. Notice the strong language used by answer choice (C): thinkers invariably lack intellectual discipline. This is a common feature of correct answers in Justify the Conclusion questions, as their goal is to definitively prove the conclusion.

Answer choice (D): This answer choice supports the counterargument that the author is attempting to refute and is therefore incorrect.

Answer choice (E): This answer choice is only attractive because it addresses some of the elements that we need to connect in order to prove the conclusion. Unfortunately, establishing that intellectual discipline is necessary for having freedom of thought does not amount to a definitive proof of the conclusion.
 LustingFor!L
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#34616
I attempted to diagram this stimulus and came up with a waaaaaaaaaay more complicated diagram.

Sentence 1:
-Freedom of thought -> Intellectual Progress (PREMISE OF ARGUED THEORY)
[Side note, seeing the phrase "it has been argued" indicated to me that the professor will likely believe opposite of this argument.]
-Freedom of thought -> Allows thinkers to pursue ideas regardless of offending/direction (PREMISE OF ARGUED THEORY)
Sentence 2:
-Intellectual Progress -> Full implications of interrelated ideas (PREMISE OF PROFESSOR)
-Intellectual Progress->Intellectual Discipline (PREMISE OF PROFESSOR)
Sentence 3:
-Professor does not agree that Freedom of thought -> Intellectual Progress (CONCLUSION OF PROFESSOR)

Narrowed down to answer choices, B, C, and E. Eliminated B, because this was a part of the argued theory's premise. Left with C and E and at this point I was beyond confused and abandoned the question to look at explanations on student center.

Any ideas on how to clear this up for me would be greatly appreciated... :-? :-? :cry: :cry: :cry:
 Steven Palmer
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#35769
Hi,

The key with justify questions is often to look for a missing link between the stimulus's premises and the stimulus's conclusion.

The unexplained premise in the professor's argument is that thinkers need intellectual discipline, and thus (his conclusion) that the argument for freedom of thought fails. Where did this intellectual discipline idea come from? It came out of nowhere and was never tied into the argument except that it was the main premise to determine the conclusion.

For these reasons, you were right to narrow your answer choices to (C) and (E). The next step is to link intellectual discipline with the rest of the argument. When we reread the sentence involving intellectual discipline, the whole point is that in order to have intellectual progress, we need intellectual discipline. The professor then concludes that we cannot, thus, have freedom of thought. A great prephrase here would be that we, thus, don't have any intellectual discipline. (C) says this, while (E) says largely the opposite.

Hope this helped!
Steven
 swt2003
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#37428
Some people argue: Intellectual Progress -----> Freedom of thought

(but, these people are wrong) because:


Intellectual Progress ------>Mine full Implications--------->Discipline

Answer C

If Freedom of thought -----> NOT Discipline, Now take the contrapositive, if Discipline then NOT Freedom of Thought .

Now, we can feed this new statement into our statement above:


Intellectual Progress------>Mine Full Implications-------->Discipline--------> NOT Freedom of thought
 Blueballoon5%
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#44546
Hi! Could someone help explain how the conclusion in the stimulus ("There, this argument for freedom of thought fails") is then translated to the conditional statement ("Intellectual Progress → NO Freedom of Thought")?

____

My guess: In order to attack the argument in the first sentence, we need to attack the conditional statement made in the first sentence. To attack a conditional statement, we negate the necessary condition.

First sentence (conditional statement): IP :arrow: FT
Conclusion (attacking first sentence): IP :arrow: NO FT
 James Finch
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#44584
Hi Blueballoon,

The first sentence is the statement that the stimulus is arguing against. In order to successfully do that, the stimulus will have to show that, as you note, the presence of the sufficient condition actually leads to the lack of the necessary condition, or the contrapositive, that the presence of the necessary condition leads to the lack of the sufficient condition.

So in arguing against:

IP :arrow: FoT

The stimulus will have to prove either:

IP :arrow: FoT

or

FoT :arrow: IP

What the stimulus ends up doing is arguing:

IP :arrow: MFI :arrow: ID

Which means we still need either

ID :arrow: FoT

or

FoT :arrow: ID

Our correct answer choice (C) ends up giving us:

FoT :arrow: ID

Thus logically completing the argument in the stimulus.

Hope this helps!
 Tuothekhazar
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#77383
Please allow me to share my thoughts regarding your analysis regarding the terms of " precondition " equals to the necessarily cue.

Conditional chain:

1.IP ---> FOT ( Freedom of thought ) = A ---> B = ~ B ---> ~ A

2. IP ---> FIOII ( full implications of interrelated idea ) ---> ID ( intellectual Discipline ) = A ---> C ---> D = ~ D ---> ~C ---> ~ A

Therefore, argument for FOT fail ( ~ FOT ) = ~ B


By combining 2 premises' contrapositives, we can have ~B ---> ~ D ( if No freedom of thought, it must be true that No intellectual discipline ); however, its the contrapositive of the incorrect answer E.

evidenced from the analysis, the term - precondition should be defined as the sufficient condition for intellectual progress, since

1. FOT ---> IP = B ---> A

2. IP ---> FIOII ( full implications of interrelated idea ) ---> ID ( intellectual Discipline ) = A ---> C ---> D

Combine 2 premises = B ---> A ---> C ---> D

Conclusion is, Argument for B fail, then we know that what we want to DO is to negate D ( Intellectual Discipline ), which is B ---> ~ D

So, perfectly matching the correct answer C = freedom of thought ---> no intellectual discipline.


Just my humble 2 cents share, and always please let me know if my reasoning is wrong.
 Adam Tyson
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#77672
Your reasoning was good up to a point, Tuothekhazar, but you made an error here:
Therefore, argument for FOT fail ( ~ FOT ) = ~ B

By combining 2 premises' contrapositives, we can have ~B ---> ~ D ( if No freedom of thought, it must be true that No intellectual discipline )
No Freedom of Thought should be treated as a Necessary Condition, not a Sufficient Condition, and should yield the relationship "If Intellectual Discipline, then no Freedom of Thought".) That is what we need in order to Justify the Conclusion in this argument.

Also, a precondition is a Necessary Condition, because it is something that must occur, not something that guarantees something will occur. By analogy, consider that a certain law school may say "taking the LSAT is a precondition for acceptance into our program." They are not saying that if you take the LSAT, then you will be accepted. They are saying that if you are accepted, you must have taken the LSAT. The necessary condition - the precondition - must happen first chronologically, but it still goes to the right in the conditional chain because it is necessary.
 g_lawyered
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#90019
Hi P.S.,
After reading James and T's detailed explanation, I am confused on how answer choice C correctly links the logic. Can someone please explain how we can assume (C): Freedom of Thought :arrow: NO Intellectual Discipline.

Here is how I follow the logic:
Concl- Intellectual Progress :arrow: NO Freedom of Thought
Contrapositive: Freedom of Thought :arrow: NO Intellectual Progress

Premise 2: Intellectual Progress :arrow: Intellectual Discipline
Contrapositive: NO Intellectual Discipline :arrow: NO Intellectual Progress

Correct answer C translates to: (C): Freedom of Thought :arrow: NO Intellectual Discipline.

How can we use Intellectual Progress to link to NO Intellectual Discipline? Premise 2 contrapositive states:
NO Intellectual Discipline :arrow: NO Intellectual Progress .
And we CAN'T infer anything from the necessary condition- in this case NO Intellectual Progress (since we can't go backwards on the arrow).

Another question: Is answer choice E a mistaken reversal? Since it doesn't negate the terms (it only reverses them).

I was able to narrow between Answer choices (C) and (E) because I spotted the new concept of: Intellectual Discipline in the premise. But I DIDN'T ID the conditional reasoning and chose answer choice E. :-? :-?

Thanks in advance!
 Rachael Wilkenfeld
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#90142
Hi GGIBA003

You have the correct diagrams, but I think you are misunderstanding what the role is of a justify answer. We aren't assuming anything. We are looking for the answer choice that, if added to the stimulus, is enough to reach the conclusion.

Premise: IP :arrow: ID
Conclusion: IP :arrow: FoT

To justify this conclusion, and show that it is required to get from the premise to the conclusion. ID is the new aspect of the premise, and FoT is the aspect of the conclusion that needs addressed. We want to say that the premise is enough for the conclusion, so the aspect of the premise should be sufficient (enough) to draw the conclusion (necessary).

We need to link ID :arrow: FoT. This means that FoT :arrow: ID.

Answer choice (C) is the contrapositive that we found above.

Answer choice (E) isn't really a mistaken reversal. It negates combines some parts of the terms but not in a way that gets us to the conclusion.

Hope that helps!

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