kupwarriors9 wrote: ↑Tue Jul 13, 2021 8:03 am
If that's the main conclusion, why doesn't the second sentence (first premise) directly support the main conclusion? It seems as if that sentence ("Universities of intellectual freedom...") supports the "Clearly, suppressing information concerning such [potentially valuable] discoveries is incompatible with the university's obligation to promote the free now of ideas" sentence better. I don't understand why "Clearly.." sentence isn't the main conclusion if it seems better supported by the premises than " university should not be entitled to patent the inventions of its faculty members. "
Dave's post earlier in this thread breaks down why it doesn't make sense for the first sentence to support the last sentence, although it DOES make sense for the last sentence to support the first. So the last sentence supports something else. It's impossible for something that supports something else to be the main conclusion.
Further, the entire point of a subconclusion is that it has support for it, and that it supports something else. So pointing out that some statements in the stimulus support the last sentence is just showing that that last sentence is also some kind of conclusion, although, again, it cannot be the main conclusion, based on Dave's post.
If a stimulus has a subconclusion, at least one of the premises will support
that subconclusion directly, so those premises' support of the main conclusion will always be indirect. So, again, the situation we're seeing here is how arguments with subconclusions have to work.
Or does it just matter whether the sub-conclusion supports the main conclusion?
E.g. "Clearly, suppressing information concerning such [potentially valuable] discoveries is incompatible with the university's obligation to promote the free now of ideas" gives support for "A university should not be entitled to patent the inventions of its faculty members. ", but not the other way around.
Dave's post said exactly this.
Is it correct to assume the main conclusion always is the one that gets support by the sub-conclusion only and the sub conclusion is always the one that is giving the support to the main conclusion only?
No, that's not quite correct. It's probably typical, but a subconclusion can support another subconclusion. It's happened at least once on a real question:
viewtopic.php?f=489&t=10715
Further, the main conclusion could get support from a (pure) premise AND a subconclusion, directly. So be careful with absolutes here.
Robert Carroll