- Wed May 29, 2019 5:15 pm
#65181
I think the relationship between standing up and having free use of the hands is more causal than conditional, blade21cn. Let's look at the conditional possibilities:
1. If you stand upright, you have free use of the hands
That's not what the author is saying, because free use of the hands is only made possible, rather than being absolutely required. I'm not sure I would agree that standing upright by definition means that the hands are free, although that certainly isn't much of a stretch.
2. If you have free use of the hands, then you stand upright
Hmmm, maybe. But is standing upright really required? Standing up might make free use possible, but that isn't as strong as saying nothing else does make it possible and that standing is therefore necessary. I think this interpretation is closer, but still a stronger claim than that made by the author.
Causally, though, looks good, because the author uses the active language of "makes" - standing causes the possibility of free use of the hands because it "makes" that possible. So, if I felt so inclined, I would treat this as a causal claim.
Ultimately, though, there is nothing about this argument that makes me think I need to treat it conditionally OR causally. Instead, I simply focus on the timeline. The author argues about what came first, and he has his reasons why he thinks so. We need to weaken that, so we want some evidence that he may have the timeline wrong, and that his evidence may not be good enough. My focus, rather than on a diagram or a causal claim, is strictly on "find some evidence that suggests advanced toolmaking prior to standing up."
We often have a tendency to try to force our analysis into familiar frameworks, and conditional and causal frameworks can quickly become crutches that we lean on too heavily and that end up dragging us down rather than lifting us up (I think my metaphor broke down there somewhere, but stay with me!) If you see them jumping out at you, great, use them! But if you don't see clear conditional or causal indications in the stimulus, don't try to apply them, and instead look at the argument another way, with a more broad view of the overall structure. After all, in LR it's usually fewer than half of all the questions that can be categorized as either conditional or causal, so there's many other ways that we should be going about the business of analyzing them.
1. If you stand upright, you have free use of the hands
That's not what the author is saying, because free use of the hands is only made possible, rather than being absolutely required. I'm not sure I would agree that standing upright by definition means that the hands are free, although that certainly isn't much of a stretch.
2. If you have free use of the hands, then you stand upright
Hmmm, maybe. But is standing upright really required? Standing up might make free use possible, but that isn't as strong as saying nothing else does make it possible and that standing is therefore necessary. I think this interpretation is closer, but still a stronger claim than that made by the author.
Causally, though, looks good, because the author uses the active language of "makes" - standing causes the possibility of free use of the hands because it "makes" that possible. So, if I felt so inclined, I would treat this as a causal claim.
Ultimately, though, there is nothing about this argument that makes me think I need to treat it conditionally OR causally. Instead, I simply focus on the timeline. The author argues about what came first, and he has his reasons why he thinks so. We need to weaken that, so we want some evidence that he may have the timeline wrong, and that his evidence may not be good enough. My focus, rather than on a diagram or a causal claim, is strictly on "find some evidence that suggests advanced toolmaking prior to standing up."
We often have a tendency to try to force our analysis into familiar frameworks, and conditional and causal frameworks can quickly become crutches that we lean on too heavily and that end up dragging us down rather than lifting us up (I think my metaphor broke down there somewhere, but stay with me!) If you see them jumping out at you, great, use them! But if you don't see clear conditional or causal indications in the stimulus, don't try to apply them, and instead look at the argument another way, with a more broad view of the overall structure. After all, in LR it's usually fewer than half of all the questions that can be categorized as either conditional or causal, so there's many other ways that we should be going about the business of analyzing them.
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