- Posts: 44
- Joined: Jul 18, 2022
- Mon Aug 01, 2022 3:02 pm
#96470
Hello,
I understand that E most closely relates the flaw committed by the journalist: she or he dismisses the legitimacy of ESP on the grounds of one deceptive researcher. And, as E suggests, the author presumes this applies to the rest of the ESP research. So, on the basis of a lack of evidence ALONE the author discredits the belief in ESP. Spelled out in conditional logic: No evidence ------> not a supported belief. Contrapositive: Supported belief ---------- > evidence. That contrapositive matches quite nicely with C: "presupposes that, in general, only evidence from experiments can support beliefs."
At the very least, it seems to me that the author DOES believe that in the case of ESP evidence alone can be used to support the belief, seeing that it was the lack of evidence alone that led him to discredit the belief. Is C wrong, then, because it speaks about what is the case in "general," while the journalist limits his discourse to ESP research? Or, should I have simply accepted E on the grounds that it better describes what is at face value going on in the stimulus?
Thank you in advance,
Sunshine
I understand that E most closely relates the flaw committed by the journalist: she or he dismisses the legitimacy of ESP on the grounds of one deceptive researcher. And, as E suggests, the author presumes this applies to the rest of the ESP research. So, on the basis of a lack of evidence ALONE the author discredits the belief in ESP. Spelled out in conditional logic: No evidence ------> not a supported belief. Contrapositive: Supported belief ---------- > evidence. That contrapositive matches quite nicely with C: "presupposes that, in general, only evidence from experiments can support beliefs."
At the very least, it seems to me that the author DOES believe that in the case of ESP evidence alone can be used to support the belief, seeing that it was the lack of evidence alone that led him to discredit the belief. Is C wrong, then, because it speaks about what is the case in "general," while the journalist limits his discourse to ESP research? Or, should I have simply accepted E on the grounds that it better describes what is at face value going on in the stimulus?
Thank you in advance,
Sunshine