- Mon Jul 22, 2019 4:48 pm
#66774
Okay so we have to key causal links:
1st one is explicit: price increase caused more personal growing
Second one is implied/assumed: 1st link (explicit) leads to two largest seed companies sales increasing...
This is strange because the 1st one (explicit) is the conclusion and yet it is responsible for a premise occurring. That is, a conclusion is causing a premise.
This is confusing to me.
Also, regarding assumption 1, nowhere does it state that this is reference to a more general increase in sales...just because two big retailers had success does not mean that all retailers had success. And also, the assumption that they retail seed companies pertain to planting personal gardens is a hard one for me because I don’t see how seed companies would necessarily entail buying from personal gardens. Personal gardens sounds like would presumably operate independently from retailers...not sure how the evidence here suggests to the contrary
Adam Tyson wrote:I'll try, Freddy!The author has noted that sales by the two largest seed companies have increased lately. He suggests that the cause of that increase is that produce prices have driven more people to plant gardens. Our author is apparently assuming that retail seed sales overall have gone up."
The premises are:
1. produce prices spiked last year
2. sales at two companies increased last year
The conclusion is that the price increase last year caused more planting in personal gardens
The assumptions are:
1. Sales increases at those two companies indicate a more general increase in sales, rather than just a shift in who has what market share
2. Sales by retail seed companies correlate with planting personal gardens
To weaken the argument, we can attack either of those assumptions. Answer E attacks the first one, suggesting the possibility of a shift in market share rather than a general increase in sales. It doesn't prove it, but it certainly raises doubt about that assumption.
I hope that helps!
Okay so we have to key causal links:
1st one is explicit: price increase caused more personal growing
Second one is implied/assumed: 1st link (explicit) leads to two largest seed companies sales increasing...
This is strange because the 1st one (explicit) is the conclusion and yet it is responsible for a premise occurring. That is, a conclusion is causing a premise.
This is confusing to me.
Also, regarding assumption 1, nowhere does it state that this is reference to a more general increase in sales...just because two big retailers had success does not mean that all retailers had success. And also, the assumption that they retail seed companies pertain to planting personal gardens is a hard one for me because I don’t see how seed companies would necessarily entail buying from personal gardens. Personal gardens sounds like would presumably operate independently from retailers...not sure how the evidence here suggests to the contrary