- Fri Oct 16, 2015 6:21 pm
#20231
Hi Sherry001,
Your question about answer choice (C) is very interesting! The stimulus essentially uses the growing economic incentive created by an expanding human population and a diminishing amount of unoccupied space on Earth as an implicit sufficient condition, the presence of which we can regard as sufficient to override any existing disincentives (e.g., high cost) to using the technology to build moon colonies, thus leading to the conclusion that the colonies will almost certainly be built. So you can think of the conditional content of the argument roughly as follows:
If the economic incentive grows, then the colonies will be built.
But it’s also a bit of a hybrid argument, since there is also the causal implication that the growing economic incentive will almost certainly cause the disincentive to be overridden and the colonies to be built.
Notice how answer choice (A) very cleverly addresses both of these features of the stimulus by describing the flaw as taking for granted that the economic incentive will grow sufficiently (become sufficient) to cause (act as a causal agent) the colonies to be built (necessary effect).
Answer choice (C) is tricky because, as you noticed, it also picks up on the fact that the stimulus has implied a quasi-sufficient-necessary relationship (with a hint of a causal relationship), but in fact this answer choice mistakenly reverses the implied conditional relationship in the stimulus, by portraying the economic incentive as a necessary condition to the colony-building rather than the sufficient condition that the stimulus made it.
Answer choice (C) could have worked if the stimulus had implicitly reasoned that, “only if the economic incentive grows, will the moon colonies be built.” Then we could have agreed with (C) that the stimulus was mistaken to reason something like, “if colonies, then economic incentive,” if there is actually a possibility that colonies might be built without the economic incentive--i.e., that the argument's sufficient condition might actually have existed without the presence of the necessary condition.
But since the stimulus actually says something more like, “if incentive, then colonies,” it is not pointing out a flaw for (C) to say that the colonies (the necessary condition) might be present without the incentive (the sufficient condition), because the presence of the necessary condition never tells us that the sufficient condition must be present. Even if the colonies might exist without the incentive (as (C) suggests), this would not make the stimulus wrong to say, “if there is an incentive, then there will almost certainly be colonies.” Calling this a flaw makes (C) essentially guilty of a mistaken reversal.
I hope this clarifies things!
Laura
Your question about answer choice (C) is very interesting! The stimulus essentially uses the growing economic incentive created by an expanding human population and a diminishing amount of unoccupied space on Earth as an implicit sufficient condition, the presence of which we can regard as sufficient to override any existing disincentives (e.g., high cost) to using the technology to build moon colonies, thus leading to the conclusion that the colonies will almost certainly be built. So you can think of the conditional content of the argument roughly as follows:
If the economic incentive grows, then the colonies will be built.
But it’s also a bit of a hybrid argument, since there is also the causal implication that the growing economic incentive will almost certainly cause the disincentive to be overridden and the colonies to be built.
Notice how answer choice (A) very cleverly addresses both of these features of the stimulus by describing the flaw as taking for granted that the economic incentive will grow sufficiently (become sufficient) to cause (act as a causal agent) the colonies to be built (necessary effect).
Answer choice (C) is tricky because, as you noticed, it also picks up on the fact that the stimulus has implied a quasi-sufficient-necessary relationship (with a hint of a causal relationship), but in fact this answer choice mistakenly reverses the implied conditional relationship in the stimulus, by portraying the economic incentive as a necessary condition to the colony-building rather than the sufficient condition that the stimulus made it.
Answer choice (C) could have worked if the stimulus had implicitly reasoned that, “only if the economic incentive grows, will the moon colonies be built.” Then we could have agreed with (C) that the stimulus was mistaken to reason something like, “if colonies, then economic incentive,” if there is actually a possibility that colonies might be built without the economic incentive--i.e., that the argument's sufficient condition might actually have existed without the presence of the necessary condition.
But since the stimulus actually says something more like, “if incentive, then colonies,” it is not pointing out a flaw for (C) to say that the colonies (the necessary condition) might be present without the incentive (the sufficient condition), because the presence of the necessary condition never tells us that the sufficient condition must be present. Even if the colonies might exist without the incentive (as (C) suggests), this would not make the stimulus wrong to say, “if there is an incentive, then there will almost certainly be colonies.” Calling this a flaw makes (C) essentially guilty of a mistaken reversal.
I hope this clarifies things!
Laura