- Mon Dec 23, 2019 1:11 pm
#72764
Hey there, hrhyoo, let me see if I can clarify for you. First, the part about "many of my colleagues say" isn't really a premise of the argument, because that isn't used to support the conclusion. A premise is a claim made by the author that is used to provide support to a conclusion. So that statement was really just establishing the subject matter of the argument. Let's say it provided background, and established what it is that the author is arguing against.
So, the argument boils down to one premise, which is that the economy is growing at a sustainable rate. That is used to support a VERY broad conclusion, that there is no reason to lower interest rates. The author has eliminated ONE reason - boosting the economy - and made a giant leap to there being NO other possible reason for lowering interest rates. What if there might be other reasons for doing so? That's the flaw here. I might describe this as a classic "some evidence" flaw - the author has some evidence that an action isn't useful, and concludes that the action cannot possibly be useful. The author takes their evidence too far, believing it to be complete proof of a claim when it merely strengthens that claim.
In short, the conclusion is "there's no reason." The flaw is failing to consider other reasons beside the one discussed.
So, the argument boils down to one premise, which is that the economy is growing at a sustainable rate. That is used to support a VERY broad conclusion, that there is no reason to lower interest rates. The author has eliminated ONE reason - boosting the economy - and made a giant leap to there being NO other possible reason for lowering interest rates. What if there might be other reasons for doing so? That's the flaw here. I might describe this as a classic "some evidence" flaw - the author has some evidence that an action isn't useful, and concludes that the action cannot possibly be useful. The author takes their evidence too far, believing it to be complete proof of a claim when it merely strengthens that claim.
In short, the conclusion is "there's no reason." The flaw is failing to consider other reasons beside the one discussed.
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
Follow me on Twitter at https://twitter.com/LSATadam
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
Follow me on Twitter at https://twitter.com/LSATadam