- Sat Nov 26, 2016 7:54 pm
#30927
Focusing on the question helped me with this one. There is no obvious argument, so I felt confused at first as to how to approach this necessary assumption question. It asks which assumption is required for the ANALOGY to work.
It is established that engineering analyzes the working of a whole machine, and physics/chemistry can look at some conditions necessary for how this machine functions, but they are not able to express how the whole works. This is then compared to how physiology looks at the whole of the human body and how it functions, whereas physics and chemistry can't express how the whole works. The analogy is then that engineering sees it subject matter differently than chemistry/physics; in a way similar to how physiology sees its subject matter differently than chemistry/physics.
Let's take an easier example of an analogy -- head : hat :: pan : lid. Just as you put your hat on top of your head to cover it, you can put a lid on top of a pan to cover it.
A) is wrong because you don't need to establish that the subject matter of physiology is similar to the subject matter of engineering for the analogy to work. Does your human head really have to have that much in common with a pan for the above analogy to work? The only thing that is necessary for an analogy is that the RELATIONSHIP between the two elements are similar, not that the entities themselves are.
B) surely helps the analogy work a little better, but it is not NECESSARY for the analogy to be applied. Only one similarity in the relationship needs to be there for an analogy to work, even though having two similarities is helpful. So, to use my analogy, you put your hat on your head, just as you put a lid on top of a pan. You also put your hat on your head to COVER IT, just as you put a lid on top of a pan to COVER it. This latter element is helpful, but it is not necessary for the analogy to work.
C) is the right answer because it establishes that the analogy itself is valid. To use the negation method: if there is no similarity between how the principle discovered by engineers relates to the entire functioning of the machine and how the principle discovered by physiologists relates to the entire functioning of an organism, then you can't apply the analogy.