- Wed Oct 17, 2018 12:31 pm
#59606
Hello Powerscore,
A question and a quick suggestion! In the Powerscore books, it would be cool if there were a chapter on the following!
The problem I have with a lot of questions is interpreting the strength of the repudiation and where it is directed. I have found there are 3 possibilities in how the author would respond: "your conclusion is wrong" or "I have doubts about your conclusion in and of itself" or "I am not doubting your conclusion itself, but the reasoning you used doesn't necessarily get you to that conclusion" This distinction has cause me to steer away from the ethos of stimuli when I appraise it the wrong way.
So overall, three options 1) calling conclusion downright false, 2) questioning the conclusion not based on the reasoning to support it, but based on other reasoning, 3) questioning the conclusion based on the reasoning provided which doesn't necessarily get you to that conclusion.
Am I correct in the following assessment?
"you're wrong" (hypothesis essentially = conclusion)
I reject your hypothesis (not sure), his hypothesis is unlikely to be true or likely false, his hypothesis is not plausible, his hypothesis is absurd, I disagree with your hypothesis, your criticism is misplaced
"I cast doubt on the conclusion" (hypothesis essentially = conclusion):
I cast doubt on his hypothesis, his conclusion is unwarranted, too hasty an inference, I reject your claim, I don't agree with your hypothesis.
"casting doubt not on the conclusion, but that the reasoning doesn't get you to the presented conclusion":
Too hasty an inference,
conclusion is unwarranted/weakly supported/unjustified
your reasoning is flawed.
Sometimes the nuance is just too much for me! For example, "I disagree with your conclusion" is different than "I don't agree with your conclusion"! The first is a proclamation of "you're wrong" for which the onus is on this person to provide counterevidence, and the second I believe to be just expressing that the argument presented is faulty.
Thank you!
A question and a quick suggestion! In the Powerscore books, it would be cool if there were a chapter on the following!
The problem I have with a lot of questions is interpreting the strength of the repudiation and where it is directed. I have found there are 3 possibilities in how the author would respond: "your conclusion is wrong" or "I have doubts about your conclusion in and of itself" or "I am not doubting your conclusion itself, but the reasoning you used doesn't necessarily get you to that conclusion" This distinction has cause me to steer away from the ethos of stimuli when I appraise it the wrong way.
So overall, three options 1) calling conclusion downright false, 2) questioning the conclusion not based on the reasoning to support it, but based on other reasoning, 3) questioning the conclusion based on the reasoning provided which doesn't necessarily get you to that conclusion.
Am I correct in the following assessment?
"you're wrong" (hypothesis essentially = conclusion)
I reject your hypothesis (not sure), his hypothesis is unlikely to be true or likely false, his hypothesis is not plausible, his hypothesis is absurd, I disagree with your hypothesis, your criticism is misplaced
"I cast doubt on the conclusion" (hypothesis essentially = conclusion):
I cast doubt on his hypothesis, his conclusion is unwarranted, too hasty an inference, I reject your claim, I don't agree with your hypothesis.
"casting doubt not on the conclusion, but that the reasoning doesn't get you to the presented conclusion":
Too hasty an inference,
conclusion is unwarranted/weakly supported/unjustified
your reasoning is flawed.
Sometimes the nuance is just too much for me! For example, "I disagree with your conclusion" is different than "I don't agree with your conclusion"! The first is a proclamation of "you're wrong" for which the onus is on this person to provide counterevidence, and the second I believe to be just expressing that the argument presented is faulty.
Thank you!