Hi P.S.,
Similar to the question posted above, I also had difficulty understanding their arguments. I interpreted Henry's argument to mean/His conclusion is: that strikes by university faculty's
shouldn't be legally permitted because of the premise: "But strikes by university faculty are an exception". An "exception" to the previous sentence which he states "Most employee strikes should be legally permitted. "
Question 1:
This part of the explanation above has gotten me confused:
"Henry states that university strikes are an exception to the rule, because they harm customers. So Henry thinks that most of the time strikes do not harm customers. Menkin claims that Henry is mistake--that harm to customers is the rule, not the exception."
How can we infer that Henry thinks that most of the strikes don't harm customers?
For Henry's principle I understood it to mean: If strike harms customers
NOT Legally permitted
Contrapositive: Legally permitted
strike DIDN'T harm customers
Menkin's conclusion is that: If strike harms customer ("if your principle is correct")
never legally permitted
Contrapositive: legally permitted
strike DIDN'T harm customer.
Question 2:
In my understanding, they are agreeing about the principle (since Henry's and Menkin's principle translated says the same thing). Because the question asks about what they
disagree, I eliminated answer B. What part of the argument tells us that what Henry & Menkin disagree about is answer B?
Question 3:
However, what they disagree about is whether it should/shouldn't be legally permitted- what answer C states. This is the reason why I chose answer C so confidently.
I feel like I misunderstood 1 of the speakers argument and is why I'm stuck on this. Can someone please clarify where I went wrong?
Thanks in advance!