- Thu Oct 28, 2021 11:28 am
#91665
glasann,
You can connect two "most" statements in certain situations. There's an example at this link, which I'll quote: viewtopic.php?t=17137
With that in mind, in this situation, the premises therefore allow us to infer that a majority of scientists surveyed simultaneously accept Wang's Law and know the results of the Brown-Eisler Experiment. That's already proven, so we don't need to add anything to the argument. Note that one thing we're not told is how many scientists know anything about how the Law and the Experiment impact the Minsk Hypothesis. As is no surprise, the correct answer addresses that gap in the argument.
Robert Carroll
You can connect two "most" statements in certain situations. There's an example at this link, which I'll quote: viewtopic.php?t=17137
The reason the above works is because the two Mosts both originate from the exact same group (B, in the case above). Imagine the following two statements:"Almost all" certainly overlaps with "most". It's definitely stronger - 51 out of 100 would not be "almost all". But it's impossible to give an exact numerical range. I think it's quite safe to say that "almost all" covers something above 80% - the range of "almost all" is, I think, narrower than that (it probably starts far above 80%), but it's at least safe to say that "almost all" requires more than 80%.
Most doctors are smart. ( D S )
Most doctors are wealthy. ( D W )
If there are 100 doctors, then at least 51 are smart and at least 51 are wealthy. So, there has to be an overlap there, leading to the inference that Some smart doctors are wealthy.
With that in mind, in this situation, the premises therefore allow us to infer that a majority of scientists surveyed simultaneously accept Wang's Law and know the results of the Brown-Eisler Experiment. That's already proven, so we don't need to add anything to the argument. Note that one thing we're not told is how many scientists know anything about how the Law and the Experiment impact the Minsk Hypothesis. As is no surprise, the correct answer addresses that gap in the argument.
Robert Carroll