Brook Miscoski wrote:Janie,
The reason (A) is correct is that the stimulus tells you that your intuition gives you mixed messages--it tells you that the conclusion is both false and true and that the premises are true (the deceptive wording "follows logically from true premises" means that the conclusion and premises are true). The last sentence of the stimulus claims you have to accept that one of those intuitions is incorrect.
Let me see if I can explain this in a little more detail.
CONCERNING ANY PARADOX:
"Your intuitions tell you that the conclusion of a philosophical paradox is false."
Hm, now lets read: "Solving the paradox would require you to accept that its conclusion is true."
Compare the two quotes above - If we accept that it's conclusion is true, we are (A) accepting something that intuitively seems to be incorrect.
So far, (A) holds water.
CONCERNING ANY PARADOX:
(1) "They tell you that its conclusion follows logically from true premises."
This is stating that the premises truly lead you to the conclusion for any paradox.
Hm, now lets read: (2) "Solving the paradox would require you to accept at least one of its premises is not true, or that its conclusion does not really follow logically from its premises."
Compare the two quote above. If we accept that at least one of its premises is not true, this contradicts (1), and so if we accept (2), we are accepting something that intuitively seems to be incorrect. Similarly, if we accept that its conclusion does not really follow logically from its premises, that also goes against (1) and we have to accept something that intuitively seems to be incorrect.
**I really don't like the way that they phrased (1). It should have read "your intuitions tell you that the conclusion is true as it can be derived correctly from the premises."