- Fri Jun 05, 2020 4:24 pm
#75988
This argument didn't really jump out at me as conditional, simshrops, and it feels like a little too much unnecessary work to put it in that framework. There wasn't an if...then structure to any of it that I noticed (although there is always something of a conditional element to any argument, in that the author believes "if my premises are true, then my conclusion must follow from them" ). Instead, I would say the argument went like this:
Premise: Representatives were within their rights to fund art in general
Conclusion: Taxpayers were not treated unfairly just because they disliked some of the art
Prephrase to strengthen that claim: When representative do things they have a right to do, then nobody has been treated unfairly, even if they don't like it all.
The stuff in answer B about an activity being "warranted" can be interpreted as meaning that it is okay, justifiable, fair. The "particular activity" is one or another offensive or otherwise displeasing artwork. The "general" activity is funding art.
Your conditional approach is accurate, and if that proved helpful then more power to you! But I would be careful about inserting conditional analyses into arguments where they don't need to go, for fear that you might end up missing or misinterpreting something critical. For example, some causal arguments can be improperly translated into conditional arguments, and the analysis of them becomes flawed because of important differences between the two.
Adam M. Tyson
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