- Sun Jul 01, 2018 3:41 am
#47324
Hello,
I have a question regarding Assumptions (Necessary Assumption).
From the Powerscore article, it defines the assumption as "unstated a premise that must be true in order for the argument to be true".
Compared to the Justify answer which completely proves or guarantees the conclusion, what would be the possible range for assumption answers? I see it does not guarantees the conclusion as Justify answer does (except when I have conditional argument - when the assumption answer inevitably proves the conclusion logically)but just like giving an argument a chance of being valid.
Further, when I see the stimulus for Assumption questions, arguments typically seem to have a reasoning flaw, which means it's an invalid argument. Justify answer completely fill this gap and make the argument 100% valid. In this sense, I don't exactly understand how the assumption answer be what must be true in order for the argument to be true/valid. Do I have to think assumption questions solely in the perspective of LSAT author who presents the argument assuming that his/her argument is valid/airtight even though we can still see the reasoning flaw in it? That said, we normally only care about the validity, not the truth of the premise nor conclusion but do I not have to worry about the validity when it comes to the assumption questions? I'm confused about "what must be true in order for the CONCLUSION to be TRUE" in a sense that we simply take the presented premise and conclusion as true since even the argument consists of false premises could be valid.
Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thanks!
I have a question regarding Assumptions (Necessary Assumption).
From the Powerscore article, it defines the assumption as "unstated a premise that must be true in order for the argument to be true".
Compared to the Justify answer which completely proves or guarantees the conclusion, what would be the possible range for assumption answers? I see it does not guarantees the conclusion as Justify answer does (except when I have conditional argument - when the assumption answer inevitably proves the conclusion logically)but just like giving an argument a chance of being valid.
Further, when I see the stimulus for Assumption questions, arguments typically seem to have a reasoning flaw, which means it's an invalid argument. Justify answer completely fill this gap and make the argument 100% valid. In this sense, I don't exactly understand how the assumption answer be what must be true in order for the argument to be true/valid. Do I have to think assumption questions solely in the perspective of LSAT author who presents the argument assuming that his/her argument is valid/airtight even though we can still see the reasoning flaw in it? That said, we normally only care about the validity, not the truth of the premise nor conclusion but do I not have to worry about the validity when it comes to the assumption questions? I'm confused about "what must be true in order for the CONCLUSION to be TRUE" in a sense that we simply take the presented premise and conclusion as true since even the argument consists of false premises could be valid.
Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thanks!