Robert Carroll wrote: ↑Tue Jan 18, 2022 1:22 pm
Christmaspuppy,
In fact I would say that an Assumption answer will very often only deal with one possible assumption that has to be made by the argument, so that's not an objection to it. Arguments can have multiple assumptions. An Assumption answer need only address one of these to be correct.
Further, you seem to be in fact arguing yourself into why answer choice (E) is correct. The conclusion is that the perception is an illusion. If, as you're pointing out, native speakers' perceptions are more accurate, then their perceptions might not be illusions...so the conclusion is undermined by that point. We in fact want native speakers' perceptions not to be more accurate, for the reasons you mention - if they're accurate in what they believe, then their beliefs may not be illusory.
Robert Carroll
Sorry I still don't get it. Let me try to explain myself. Imagine there are 5 degrees of how people hearing a language. From 1-5, the higher the degree, more accurate they hear.
Level 2 is how non-native speaker hear it as unintelligible, uninterrupted stream of sound.
Level 3 is how native speaker hear it as separate words.
Now the premise says that it is wrong that native speakers are at level 3 because non-native speakers are at level 2.
We seem to accept there's only one possibility: native speakers must at level 2 or level 1 because they are not at level 3.
But why can't it be thought like this: even those non-native speakers could at level 2, so native speakers must at level 4 or 5? Then answer E is not a necessary answer. Hope I expressed my thought correctly.