- Wed Jun 27, 2018 5:07 pm
#47099
Hi Meercat,
This is a difficult question because the stimulus is trying to prove that a principle conditional statement can be false. So the initial principle being:
Ought to do something (O2D) Can do something (CD)
and the contrapositive:
CD O2D
The ethicist is arguing:
02D CD
by using a promise to meet as an example of something a person ought to do (02D) and the traffic jam making the person late as an example of making it impossible to fulfill the promise (CD). So the setup is just the same conditional argument made on principle. This seems like a solid argument, right? Well now we have to think about how negating the conditions work, ie the contrapositive. By using the negation of the necessary condition of the principle he's trying to argue against, must also show that the contrapositive isn't necessarily true, or:
CD O2D
Put into words, this would sound something like what answer choice (D) is describing: just because you can't do something doesn't mean you aren't still obligated to do it.
Using the Assumption Negation technique to test (D), we see that the contrapositive of the initial principle holds up, invalidating the ethicist's conclusion:
"The obligation created by a promise is relieved by the fact that the promise cannot be kept"
or:
CD O2D
Hope this clears things up!
This is a difficult question because the stimulus is trying to prove that a principle conditional statement can be false. So the initial principle being:
Ought to do something (O2D) Can do something (CD)
and the contrapositive:
CD O2D
The ethicist is arguing:
02D CD
by using a promise to meet as an example of something a person ought to do (02D) and the traffic jam making the person late as an example of making it impossible to fulfill the promise (CD). So the setup is just the same conditional argument made on principle. This seems like a solid argument, right? Well now we have to think about how negating the conditions work, ie the contrapositive. By using the negation of the necessary condition of the principle he's trying to argue against, must also show that the contrapositive isn't necessarily true, or:
CD O2D
Put into words, this would sound something like what answer choice (D) is describing: just because you can't do something doesn't mean you aren't still obligated to do it.
Using the Assumption Negation technique to test (D), we see that the contrapositive of the initial principle holds up, invalidating the ethicist's conclusion:
"The obligation created by a promise is relieved by the fact that the promise cannot be kept"
or:
CD O2D
Hope this clears things up!