- Tue Jan 04, 2022 2:30 pm
#93028
pmuffley,
As always, if something is a flaw in an argument, then fixing the flaw should help fix the argument. So imagine the stimulus did indeed survey everyone on the US. 40% wanted a Conservative legislature, 20% a Moderate one, and 40% a Liberal one. If there is a representativeness flaw in the original argument, that should disappear here. So, in this new situation, do a majority of people want a legislature that is 40% Conservative, 20% Moderate, and 40% Liberal?
Well...no. It's quite possible, even likely, that no one wants that legislature. Ask each of the several hundred million people - do you want a legislature that's 40% Conservative, 20% Moderate, 40% Liberal? The Conservatives could all well say "No, that's too liberal - I want a legislature that's 100% Conservative." The same could happen for the other respondents in the other groups. So no problem has been solved with the argument by making it perfectly representative, and making the sample as large as possible. So no such problem existed.
What the failed fix proves is that what the argument is doing wrong is acting like there's any individual that actually wants the 40/20/40 split. It's like saying "America doesn't like using metric units". Well, America isn't a person with agency - America can't like or dislike anything. What does happen is that individual Americans have preferences, some related to units of measure, and maybe most Americans, most of the time, use inches instead of centimeters. We have to be careful with a loose way of speaking, and the author in this stimulus wasn't. To say, loosely, that "the country wants a 40/20/40 legislature" is perhaps a fair assessment of the data. To say "most people want a 40/20/40 legislature" is not making a claim about the whole but instead about a majority of the individual parts, who are individual citizens. Maybe "the country" wants something, but no actual person, much less a majority of people, wants that thing.
The whole is the country. The parts are the people. The 10-people survey group is NOT the relevant part in this situation. Hope this clarifies!
Robert Carroll