- Tue May 10, 2022 9:00 pm
#95276
Hi
When it comes to strengthen with necessary premise questions, this question has brought to my attention a broader issue; one with which I have been struggling for a while; one that, speaking candidly, I have not been to articulate until now!
But before I embark on articulating the issue, I would like to say thank you to PowerScore and its professional, dedicated staff for affording us this forum.
Here it is: the negation-tests are incredibly helpful when it comes to confirming the correct answer-choices on strengthen with necessary premise questions.
However, this test is futile and misleading when an answer-choice strengthens the argument but with sufficient premise. I believe that answer-choice A is an answer choice that guarantees the author's conclusion. In other words, A strengthens the argument but with a sufficient premise.
I am going to explain why I think answer-choice A is a strengthen with a sufficient premise, but before I do, please respond to the broader question of whether the negation-test works to eliminate an answer-choice that guarantees the conclusion. I could be wrong, and A does not qualify as an answer-choice that strengthens the author's conclusion with a sufficient premise. Nevertheless, my inquiry is broader than this particular stimulus/argument in that is my inference that the negation-test is not the panacea to all strengthen with necessary premise questions for it does not, or may not work on answer-choices that guarantee the argument's conclusion, (by answer-choices that guarantee the conclusion I mean answer-choices that strengthen the argument with sufficient premises but in the context of a strengthen with necessary questions)?
Now let's talk about answer choice A and its impact on the conclusion of the argument, please.
The conclusion of the argument states: "So most of the nations stating that their oil reserves were unchanged are probably incorrect." Two words are germane to the discussion "most" and probably." "Most" means more than half or more than 50%; and "probably" which means more likely. Ultimately, I humbly think that the word "probably" is what makes the negation-test dangerously tempting!
A states the following:
"For any nation with oil reserves, it is more likely that the nation was mistaken in its statements about changes in its oil reserves than that the nation's oil reserves remained unchanged."
A differentiates the assessment of a nation about what happened to its oil reserves from what actually happened to its oil reserves?
In other words, the government of a nation with oil reserves assesses the changes in its reserves, and based on its assessment makes statements regarding these changes.
The assessments would yield to the statements that either the reserves were changed or unchanged. Reporting a static level in the reserves is more likely to be erroneous than reporting changing one. So by stating that "Any nation" would probably be wrong for reporting a static level in its reserves, A undermines the reports/statements that the reserves did not change, thereby strengthening the author's conclusion.
Any" is synonymous to each, or all." And if all the nations are probably mistaken, then definitely "most" are "probably mistaken," hence the guarantee and what makes A a strengthen with sufficient premise.
Negating A: For any nation with oil reserves, it is NOT more likely (so it is either equally likely or less likely, but not both) that the nation was mistaken in its statements about changes in its oil reserves than that the nation's oil reserves remained unchanged."
Stated differently, if any nation is not more likely to be wrong, so PROBABLY not mistaken, based on negative form of A, then the conclusion would be severely weakened because: per the conclusion "most" (meaning more than 50%) would PROBABLY be mistaken, but we cannot attain that rate when negating A; hence the futility of the negative test.
In retrospect, negating A would yield to "not more likely" so either "equally likely" (which is a probability of 50% for all the nations in question to be mistaken or to be correct) or "less likely" (which is less than 50% likelihood of all the nation being mistaken; in other words probably correct). Either way - equally likely, or less likely - would prelude the conclusion which is probably and therefore more likely!
Having said that, we do not need that level of coverage, i.e., "Any," because according to the argument, "several nation.." so at least two, and the conclusion is "most" of the "several."
The author does not need to believe that "Any..." as A states because the conclusion of her argument is tempered/moderated with "most" of the "several." The standard for the burden of proof for "most" does not need to assume that high of a level of "any," although "any" does GUARANTEE it, it is NOT NECESSARY!
This is it! I know that this post is very long, and for that, I apologize, and hope that it does not deter a reply.
Respectfully,
Mazen