Robert Carroll wrote:Arindom,
Ashley said that those words do not refer to anything. Joshua claims that the words are therefore meaningless. Thus, Joshua claims:
word refers to a thing word has meaning
Otherwise, he would not have taken its not referring to a thing to indicate that it lacks meaning.
Thus:
word has meaning word refers to a thing
Answer choice (A) says this.
Joshua does not claim that words that are not useful are meaningless. Neither person discusses whether words are useful; Ashley discusses whether words refer to things.
This is a Must Be True question based on Joshua's claim. Joshua says "Since such words are meaningless," so he is saying that "such words" as Ashley has described (not referring to things) are meaningless. Stick to the Fact Test.
Robert Carroll
When I diagram the question, I draw something like the following:
No R (Do not refer to anything)
Meaningless
Therefore, the contropositive should be
Meaning
Referring to something
However, if we diagram A, it becomes
Referring to something
meaning (This is exactly the mistaken reversal of what we just diagrammed. Therefore, I am not sure why it is the correct.
In addition, could anyone please illustrate what's the difference between A and C? How to diagram C?