- Wed Jun 17, 2020 8:20 pm
#76307
hi! so i was just working on this question, and I think i'm almost at full understanding, but there's something i'm still stuck on.
So I originally crossed out C because I thought that it sounded like a necessary assumption rather than a strengthen. [While taking the test, i had a moment of remembering someone say "don't confuse NA with Strengthen" but what i forgot was that I'm pretty sure the idea is actually that necessary assumptions can strengthen, but not all strengthens are necessary assumptions. Is that a fair way to look at it?] [I also thought that a weakness in C was that it didn't mention that, in most cases where planets were found orbiting a distant star, those orbits were ovular. I guess that was incorrect?]
I realize now that if that was my logic, that actually should have led me to C as the right answer. Additionally, now that I've read these other explanations, it makes sense to me that the
But what I actually ended ended up picking was E :/
The reason why was, combined with my [incorrect] NA/S logic as per above, it was attractive that E seemed to be getting rid of an alternate cause, the alternate cause being that there was nothing other/larger than a planet that could have caused the orbit to become ovular. Now that i've read the explanation, I see that causal reasoning is not the weakness here (bc just showing one instance of removing an alt cause is not enough, since the causal reasoning in the stimulus is already so qualified), but instead it is the analogy itself.
But what I'm confused on is that it still seems like E is not completely wrong? Like did I just totally read E incorrectly? I didn't read the "other" as saying that nothing at all existed in that distant star's system that could have affected the orbit (thereby weakening the argument). I read it as saying that there were no other objects larger than a planet that could have been the thing affecting the orbit.
Sorry for the long post. It's so hard to put crazy logic like this into words lol