- Tue Mar 01, 2022 7:21 am
#93996
Hi Beth,
In reversing the statement how do I go about that?
"it is not necessary to officially confirm scientific studies before they are published because bad science will be disconfirmed later."
Am I stating "bad science will be disconfirmed later because no scientific studies are confirmed before they are published" ?
Either way I kind of see your point, it does not make any sense. Thank you so much
Chris
In reversing the statement how do I go about that?
"it is not necessary to officially confirm scientific studies before they are published because bad science will be disconfirmed later."
Am I stating "bad science will be disconfirmed later because no scientific studies are confirmed before they are published" ?
Either way I kind of see your point, it does not make any sense. Thank you so much
Chris
Beth Hayden wrote: ↑Tue Feb 22, 2022 7:28 pm Hi C,
This is definitely a tricky question to catch the conclusion! Remember, an argument can have multiple conclusions, but only one is the main conclusion (the other are intermediate conclusions). What's the difference? Well, the main conclusion is supported by every other statement in the stimulus but is not used to support something else.
An intermediate conclusion is in turn used to support the main conclusion. If you narrow it down to two statements and you're not sure which is the main conclusion, just ask: is one statement used to help prove the other statement? One trick I use is to insert the word "because" after one of the statements. If X is true because of Y, Y is not the main conclusion.
Here, the argument says that it is not necessary to officially confirm scientific studies before they are published because bad science will be disconfirmed later. If you reverse those statements, it makes no sense. The last sentence is used to support the first sentence.
I hope that helps!
Beth
Thank you kindly,
Chris
Chris