- Fri Jun 18, 2021 1:23 pm
#88078
Hi everyone!
Apologies if this question was answered, but I went through everything and am still having some trouble.
So, I chose (B), and I know that/why it's wrong - I just wasn't satisfied with the other answer choices and went with something due to time. Looking at it later, the Negation Assumption Technique helped me understand pretty quickly why it's wrong.
That said, I am still having a bit of trouble with (A). The way I understand the argument is this:
P: A 5% increase in minimum wage paid to all workers was mandated by the national government.
P: The museum's revenue does not currently exceed its expenses.
P: The mandate will significantly increase the museum's operating expenses.
P/IC: The museum will be forced to either raise admission fees or to decrease services.
C: So, the mandate will adversely affect the museum-going public.
If I am right about the argument's structure, then it seems that I need an answer choice that, when negated, would weaken the link between the mandate being enforced and the mandate affecting the museum-going public.
I think I am getting tricked up by figuring out whether or not the question is a Defender or Supporter. I know that a gap in the argument would indicate that the stimulus is a Supporter, and it feels like there is a gap in the argument here. That said, the correct answer choice (A) is phrased in a way that makes me think it's a Defender. So, my two questions are as follows:
(1) Is this a Defender or Supporter?
(2) More generally, is it possible to have a stimulus that is a Supporter or Defender while having a correct answer choice that is the other? So, for instance, can Q9 here have a Supporter stimulus while the correct answer is a Defender?
I feel like the answer to (2) is no since a Supporter stimulus is in need of assistance, and it does not seem that Defenders fill the gaps well. That said, I am not understanding this question, and it feels to me that the stimulus is in need of support while the correct answer wards off a potential attack of the argument. Maybe it does both?
I'm kind of surprised that this is the question that is getting me to post on here for the first time because it's definitely not the hardest one I've gotten wrong, but I am just not getting it. Maybe I'm overthinking it.