- Thu Oct 26, 2017 7:34 pm
#40983
Hi all,
Hate to bring this back up from the dead, but I am a little bit confused about the wording. The question very clearly reads that every political philosopher who was a socialist or a communist was influenced by Rosa Luxemburg. Now, this makes sense to me, but answer A doesn't. Let me be clear about why:
It makes sense if: "Every political philosopher of the early twentieth century was either a socialist or a communist, and was influenced by Rosa Luxemburg".
However, the original wording doesn't make sense to me.
Doesn't make sense: "Every political philosopher of the early twentieth century who was either a socialist or a communist was influenced by Rosa Luxemburg".
What i'm getting at here is that the stimulus doesn't make it clear that all political philosophers were communists or socialists in the early 20th century. There could just as easily be political philosophers who were NOT communists and NOT socialists. You might say that I'm bringing outside information in, but I'm not sure I agree. The stimulus clearly says "who was...". When you use who in this context, it clearly implies that under the umbrella term of political philosophers, there were socialists, communists, and "some other", otherwise "who" is a completely redundant and ambiguous word.
Thus, answer A only makes sense to me if it read:
"No socialist or communist political philosopher of the early twentieth century advocated a totalitarian state."
I totally understand the formal logic that was used in the answer reply. In fact, I 100% agree with it. I just don't think that the contrapositive of the logic chain allows you to select answer A as the answer.
I really appreciate anyones advice on this!!