- Sun Oct 15, 2017 7:55 am
#40539
I have a problem with those stimuli that per se are just a mess: I mean they sometimes contain lots of reasonings that seem totally irrelevant or just redundant. Some e.g.:
PT39-S2-Q14
I break down the stimuli into this:
P: the proposal will have negative consequence
C: the legislator ought to reject it
I was pretty much confused with the popularity reasoning part. After thinking over and over, I realized it might be a counterargument: the bill is popular, then it requires an assumption that legislator should vote for a popular bill, then the argument dismissed the rejection by using an analogy.
Holy crap, even though this analysis could be true, it did take me tons of time to work it out.
And again, PT29-S1-Q14
I guess the first half of the statement is totally irrelevant because then the prosecutor went on to disprove it by saying we have conclusively shown
At that point I felt totally confused this denial makes Dr. Yuge’s testiment totally weirdly connected to the whole argument. Then the argument went on to invoke a Yuge’s acknowledgement.
The questions are not so difficult but analyzing the stimuli did drain up my time because the mess made the argument full of mistakes, at least to me.
So any quick way to break down those messy arguments? Big thanks in advance
PT39-S2-Q14
I break down the stimuli into this:
P: the proposal will have negative consequence
C: the legislator ought to reject it
I was pretty much confused with the popularity reasoning part. After thinking over and over, I realized it might be a counterargument: the bill is popular, then it requires an assumption that legislator should vote for a popular bill, then the argument dismissed the rejection by using an analogy.
Holy crap, even though this analysis could be true, it did take me tons of time to work it out.
And again, PT29-S1-Q14
I guess the first half of the statement is totally irrelevant because then the prosecutor went on to disprove it by saying we have conclusively shown
At that point I felt totally confused this denial makes Dr. Yuge’s testiment totally weirdly connected to the whole argument. Then the argument went on to invoke a Yuge’s acknowledgement.
The questions are not so difficult but analyzing the stimuli did drain up my time because the mess made the argument full of mistakes, at least to me.
So any quick way to break down those messy arguments? Big thanks in advance