- Posts: 9
- Joined: Aug 02, 2021
- Tue Aug 31, 2021 11:51 am
#90083
I guess I have trained myself to disregard parts of the stimulus that don't act directly as a premise or conclusion, so I ignored the example. But in this case, the example actually acted as support / a premise in its own way, and I should not have ignored it.
Beatrice Brown wrote: ↑Mon Aug 30, 2021 6:03 pm Hi JR! Thanks for your question, and happy to help you out with thisThanks so much, Beatrice! This was helpful.
Great job identifying the premise and the conclusion of this argument. Let me put this another way and re-phrase the argument, because this will be helpful to see why answer choice (B) is correct: the author argues that all actions are motivated by self-interest because we can describe altruistic acts in terms of self-interest. The author then gives an example of how we can describe helping someone in terms of self-interest.
The reason I italicized "are" and "can" in my summary of the argument is that this is the crux of the flaw: the author makes a conclusion about what actions must be based on how we can describe them. But just because we can describe a specific type of action (altruistic acts) in terms of self-interest does not mean that all actions must be motivated by self-interest. Perhaps we can describe actions in non-self-interested ways; if there are multiple ways to describe an action, then we cannot conclude anything about what those actions must be. Note that your prephrase for this question definitely touches on this disconnect between "are" and "can"
Turning to answer choice (B), this matches our prephrase. Answer choice (B) tells us that the argument uses evidence that shows the conclusion could be true to argue that the conclusion must be true. This is what the stimulus does: the author uses evidence that shows that we can describe certain actions in terms of self-interest (using an example of a particular altruistic act) to prove the conclusion that all actions must be self-interested. But providing one example just shows us that the conclusion could be true, not that it must be true; the example of being able to describe helping someone in terms of self-interest means actions may be motivated by self-interest, but not that they must be.
To clarify your specifc question about answer choice (B) a bit further: the author did provide evidence that their conclusion could be true, which is the example of being able to describe helping someone in terms of self-interest. The issue is this evidence does not mean that the conclusion must be true. When the answer choice uses the word "argument," they do not mean "premise." Instead, the argument refers to the stimulus as a whole. Since the stimulus itself does take evidence of what can be true as proof of what must be true, this is the correct answer choice.
I hope this helps, and please let me know if you have any other questions!
I guess I have trained myself to disregard parts of the stimulus that don't act directly as a premise or conclusion, so I ignored the example. But in this case, the example actually acted as support / a premise in its own way, and I should not have ignored it.