- Sat Aug 12, 2017 9:53 am
#38222
I got this question right, but it was more through feeling it out rather than knowing for certain. Was hoping to get some feedback as to whether or not my understanding of the stimulus is correct.
I was able to ascertain the flaw being an issue with conditional reasoning. We're given in the two sentences:
(1) (if aerator installed--> pool properly aerated) A-->B
(2) ~A
(therefore) ~B
Clearly a mistaken negation.
And then this is taken further in regards to the fish thriving where we see C-->B (if fish thrive-->properly aerated- from the contrapositive). If ~B is actually the case- the final conclusion is valid, but we can't ascertain that with the mistaken negation-so the final conclusion can't properly be drawn.
A: Matches this pretty well- I think. The only difference is unless instead of without.
B: different conditional structure.
C: ~A-->~B, ~A, therefore ~B.
D: Can't link the conditional statements into a chain.
E: Valid argument
Thanks!
I was able to ascertain the flaw being an issue with conditional reasoning. We're given in the two sentences:
(1) (if aerator installed--> pool properly aerated) A-->B
(2) ~A
(therefore) ~B
Clearly a mistaken negation.
And then this is taken further in regards to the fish thriving where we see C-->B (if fish thrive-->properly aerated- from the contrapositive). If ~B is actually the case- the final conclusion is valid, but we can't ascertain that with the mistaken negation-so the final conclusion can't properly be drawn.
A: Matches this pretty well- I think. The only difference is unless instead of without.
B: different conditional structure.
C: ~A-->~B, ~A, therefore ~B.
D: Can't link the conditional statements into a chain.
E: Valid argument
Thanks!