- Fri Jul 24, 2020 11:53 am
#77399
Hi Tuo,
I want to adjust slightly your understanding of the flaw, so that you (and others) don't run into confusion here. The flaw is not in assuming that the non-occurrence of the sufficient condition means definitively that the necessary condition won't occur. In other words, the author is recommending we avoid something that would trigger the sufficient condition (presumably so that we at least have the chance to avoid the occurrence of the necessary condition). There's no conditional error in that logic. As Nikki points out helpfully above, there's nothing wrong (under the rules of conditional reasoning) with an argument that states, "Because we know if you smoke you will get cancer, therefore you should avoid smoking."
Rather, the flaw is in the author's misinterpretation of the sufficient condition, and I think you've noticed this in the numbered point raised in your post. And, by the way, your discussion of the definitions is on exactly the right track! "Routinely letting violations go unpunished" (the sufficient condition) isn't necessarily something that occurs if the society only sometimes (or occasionally) lets violations go unpunished. And that's because, as you've noticed, something that is routine is something that happens often. Something that happens "sometimes" is only something that happens in "some" instances (maybe as few as one instance!).
So the author's conclusion is harsher than it needs to be. To avoid triggering the sufficient condition, all we really need to conclude is that a society "ought not routinely to allow any of its explicit rules to be broken with impunity." The author has gone too far.
I hope this helps!
Jeremy
I want to adjust slightly your understanding of the flaw, so that you (and others) don't run into confusion here. The flaw is not in assuming that the non-occurrence of the sufficient condition means definitively that the necessary condition won't occur. In other words, the author is recommending we avoid something that would trigger the sufficient condition (presumably so that we at least have the chance to avoid the occurrence of the necessary condition). There's no conditional error in that logic. As Nikki points out helpfully above, there's nothing wrong (under the rules of conditional reasoning) with an argument that states, "Because we know if you smoke you will get cancer, therefore you should avoid smoking."
Rather, the flaw is in the author's misinterpretation of the sufficient condition, and I think you've noticed this in the numbered point raised in your post. And, by the way, your discussion of the definitions is on exactly the right track! "Routinely letting violations go unpunished" (the sufficient condition) isn't necessarily something that occurs if the society only sometimes (or occasionally) lets violations go unpunished. And that's because, as you've noticed, something that is routine is something that happens often. Something that happens "sometimes" is only something that happens in "some" instances (maybe as few as one instance!).
So the author's conclusion is harsher than it needs to be. To avoid triggering the sufficient condition, all we really need to conclude is that a society "ought not routinely to allow any of its explicit rules to be broken with impunity." The author has gone too far.
I hope this helps!
Jeremy
Jeremy Press
LSAT Instructor and law school admissions consultant
Follow me on Twitter at: https://twitter.com/JeremyLSAT
LSAT Instructor and law school admissions consultant
Follow me on Twitter at: https://twitter.com/JeremyLSAT