- Mon Oct 17, 2016 4:40 pm
#29810
Hello 15veries,
"unless there are independent reasons to deem the president's speech inflammatory, it is not true that her speech was inappropriate" can be diagrammed something like
inappropriate inflammatory
, at least in a simplified version. Thus, inflammatoriness is a requirement for inappropriateness. So the author is assuming that if there wasn't inflammatoriness, there couldn't be inappropriateness.
However, all that "Professor Riley characterized the university president's speech as inflammatory and argued that it was therefore inappropriate." seems to tell us is that inflammatoriness is sufficient for inappropriateness, not necessary. Thus, the author is wrong to think there couldn't be some other reason which could cause inappropriateness, and wrong to think that inflammatoriness is an absolute necessity for inappropriateness.
Hope this helps,
David
15veries wrote:Hi Emily, Thanks for your reply
Could you clarify which part of the author's argument relies on it?
"unless" part?
I'm still not sure why it's the error discussed in A...
Hello 15veries,
"unless there are independent reasons to deem the president's speech inflammatory, it is not true that her speech was inappropriate" can be diagrammed something like
inappropriate inflammatory
, at least in a simplified version. Thus, inflammatoriness is a requirement for inappropriateness. So the author is assuming that if there wasn't inflammatoriness, there couldn't be inappropriateness.
However, all that "Professor Riley characterized the university president's speech as inflammatory and argued that it was therefore inappropriate." seems to tell us is that inflammatoriness is sufficient for inappropriateness, not necessary. Thus, the author is wrong to think there couldn't be some other reason which could cause inappropriateness, and wrong to think that inflammatoriness is an absolute necessity for inappropriateness.
Hope this helps,
David