Kristina Moen wrote:Hi jgray,
This is a Strengthen question, so the Assumption Negation Technique will not work here. Only use that technique on Assumption questions. So let's talk about how to diagram this stimulus.
"One can never tell whether another person is acting from an ulterior motive" is not really a conditional statement per se. Remember, a conditional statement creates a relationship between two things (people, events, whatever!) where one thing is necessary for the other. If you see the sentence "Law students can never be ten years old," that creates two distinct groups (where to be a law student, it is necessary that the person is not 10 years old). But here, the word "one" is difficult to put into a group. The group of humans? I suppose you COULD diagram this as "one can't tell whether another person is acting from an ulterior motive" but that doesn't seem super useful. I would probably just write "don't know ulterior motive" next to the sentence.
"Therefore, it is impossible to tell whether someone’s action is moral" is also not a conditional statement, but it is quite a leap in logic! The first premise talked about ulterior motive, and now this sub-conclusion talks about actions being moral. Take note!
"So one should evaluate the consequences of an action rather than its morality." This is the conclusion and it is also not a conditional statement. The word "should" indicates a prescription, not an airtight conditional relationship where one thing is necessary for another.
However, the conditional relationship you always want (and is frequently missing!) in an argument is this one:
Premise (+ premise + premise...) conclusion
What would that sentence look like? Keep in mind sometimes what you are looking for is Premise A Sub-conclusion.
Hi Kristina.
Thanks for the explanation. After reviewing this question, I just want to double-check that my reasoning is sound.
After consulting the question and your explanation several times, I can see that the stimulus does not establish a conditional relationship between the premise and the subsidiary conclusion. Without one, the statements do not jointly lead to the conclusion.
As such, AC (A) is correction because it establishes a conditional relationship between the two statements, allowing the conclusion to follow.
AC (A): Know morality
know intention
Contrapositive: NOT know intention
NOT know morality
Since the premise establishes that we can know someone's ulterior motives (intentions), then we know that this contrapositive is, in fact, the case. Therefore, one should evaluate the consequences of an action rather than its morality because we cannot know the morality of one's actions.
Is my reasoning sound here?
Thanks in advance!