- Fri May 13, 2016 10:27 am
#24501
Hello,
For this question I saw the argument as:
P1: Societies in which value is measured primarily in financial terms invariably fragment into isolated social units
P2: Money not main measure of value in nonindustrial societies
C: nonindustrial societies must tend in contrast to be socially unified
I understood the flaw to be that just because a society does not have value measured primarily in financial terms does not indicate that they MUST be socially unified. I saw the flaw as ignoring the possibility of other factors that may cause the society to be socially fragmented.
I was deciding between answer D and E and I chose E. The trouble I had with answer E was that I felt that since it was saying computers ARE more technologically sophisticated than pencils, it is valid to think they are more troublesome. In my mind computers are part of the concept of being technologically sophisticated, whereas in the stimulus nonindustrial societies where money is not the main measure of value is different than the societies described in P1.
I saw the argument in answer D to be:
P1: Poets frequently convey their thoughts via nonliteral uses of language
P2: Journalists are not poets (similar to non-industrial societies don't have money as main measure)
C: Journalists always use language literally (opposite of what is said in P1, assumes that since they are not part of that group they must not have the characteristic of that group.. similar to how the C in the stimulus makes a jump from just because money isn't the main measure must mean they ARE socially unified)
Please let me know where my thinking went wrong.
Thank you,
Emily
For this question I saw the argument as:
P1: Societies in which value is measured primarily in financial terms invariably fragment into isolated social units
P2: Money not main measure of value in nonindustrial societies
C: nonindustrial societies must tend in contrast to be socially unified
I understood the flaw to be that just because a society does not have value measured primarily in financial terms does not indicate that they MUST be socially unified. I saw the flaw as ignoring the possibility of other factors that may cause the society to be socially fragmented.
I was deciding between answer D and E and I chose E. The trouble I had with answer E was that I felt that since it was saying computers ARE more technologically sophisticated than pencils, it is valid to think they are more troublesome. In my mind computers are part of the concept of being technologically sophisticated, whereas in the stimulus nonindustrial societies where money is not the main measure of value is different than the societies described in P1.
I saw the argument in answer D to be:
P1: Poets frequently convey their thoughts via nonliteral uses of language
P2: Journalists are not poets (similar to non-industrial societies don't have money as main measure)
C: Journalists always use language literally (opposite of what is said in P1, assumes that since they are not part of that group they must not have the characteristic of that group.. similar to how the C in the stimulus makes a jump from just because money isn't the main measure must mean they ARE socially unified)
Please let me know where my thinking went wrong.
Thank you,
Emily