- Tue May 15, 2012 8:29 pm
#4118
Hi!
This question is about Preptest 53, Section III, Question 23 (the naturalist's argument). I interpreted the argument to have the following logical structure (contrapositive reasoning):
Prem: A->B
Conclusion ~B->~A
i.e. the argument seems to be:
Prem: species survives a change -> change not too rapid
Conclusion: change too rapid -> species does not survive a change
In order to justify option D, we can see that it follows an identical logical structure
Prem: People not fearing changes -> knowing what the change will bring
Conc: Not knowing what the change will bring -> People fearing changes
Is that rationale sufficient and comprehensive to justify the correct option and eliminate the others?
Thanks for all the help!
This question is about Preptest 53, Section III, Question 23 (the naturalist's argument). I interpreted the argument to have the following logical structure (contrapositive reasoning):
Prem: A->B
Conclusion ~B->~A
i.e. the argument seems to be:
Prem: species survives a change -> change not too rapid
Conclusion: change too rapid -> species does not survive a change
In order to justify option D, we can see that it follows an identical logical structure
Prem: People not fearing changes -> knowing what the change will bring
Conc: Not knowing what the change will bring -> People fearing changes
Is that rationale sufficient and comprehensive to justify the correct option and eliminate the others?
Thanks for all the help!