- Tue Jan 16, 2018 6:24 pm
#42991
So, I boiled it down between A & E. However, upon reviewing this question, I realized, A turned out to be the right answer. I would like some clarity on why A is right over E please. Also, I would like to see what you make of my rationale for picking the answer choice that I did, which was E.
So, starting with A. Joanna, present a claim and concludes with, "it is futile for...whole new business." Ruth, responds by saying, "Wrong." The explanation Ruth provides would be constituted as a counterexample in answer choice A. But, I struggled with understanding, how can one offer a counterexample to a claim that didn't present an example in the first place. In other words, if John and Joe wanted to negotiate, and John says, "The only way for a deal to be successful, after a negotiation, is to give the highest offer a deal maker is willing to make." Then, Joe responds, "I offer you a $1,000.00." In that example, Joe never offered a counteroffer, per se, instead, Joe just went for the kill on John's statement. So, with that reasoning in mind, I couldn't justify this "counterexample" notion.
As for E, I took this as a binary option, you are either dead or alive. Joanna says, "The only way...that it did before going bankrupt." Ruth responds, by what I believed to be an establishment of the only plausible alternative, which is the logic opposite of what Joanna was claiming. The Kelton Company, a major mining operation, turned its mines into landfills instead of going back to mining to be successful.
So, starting with A. Joanna, present a claim and concludes with, "it is futile for...whole new business." Ruth, responds by saying, "Wrong." The explanation Ruth provides would be constituted as a counterexample in answer choice A. But, I struggled with understanding, how can one offer a counterexample to a claim that didn't present an example in the first place. In other words, if John and Joe wanted to negotiate, and John says, "The only way for a deal to be successful, after a negotiation, is to give the highest offer a deal maker is willing to make." Then, Joe responds, "I offer you a $1,000.00." In that example, Joe never offered a counteroffer, per se, instead, Joe just went for the kill on John's statement. So, with that reasoning in mind, I couldn't justify this "counterexample" notion.
As for E, I took this as a binary option, you are either dead or alive. Joanna says, "The only way...that it did before going bankrupt." Ruth responds, by what I believed to be an establishment of the only plausible alternative, which is the logic opposite of what Joanna was claiming. The Kelton Company, a major mining operation, turned its mines into landfills instead of going back to mining to be successful.