- Sun Aug 27, 2017 8:12 pm
#38891
I'm still struggling with this one. I also chose (C) because, I reasoned, Chemistry is an example of a science that clearly has lots of value and has fishy roots, so it's a counter example (I.e., contradicts the principle). I suppose this brings in outside knowledge (chemistry is valuable science) but that seems obvious to the average person.
My problem with (B) is that the argument never says "you should ignore" it just says "take into account." I reasoned that there's nothing wrong with someone assessing chemistry as follows: Chemistry has value but a bit lesss than physics because physics has pure roots and chemistry doesn't." In other words, taking something into account is a pretty low standard and still permits consideration of how "current theories and practices differ...".
Am I missing something? Thanks
My problem with (B) is that the argument never says "you should ignore" it just says "take into account." I reasoned that there's nothing wrong with someone assessing chemistry as follows: Chemistry has value but a bit lesss than physics because physics has pure roots and chemistry doesn't." In other words, taking something into account is a pretty low standard and still permits consideration of how "current theories and practices differ...".
Am I missing something? Thanks
Dave Killoran wrote:Hi Elana,
Thanks for the question! You'll probably see some delays in replies right now, since the posting level is way higher than normal
Yes, answer choice (E) is an uncertain use of the term—good job!
Answer choice (C) isn't a formal evidence error, and actually does not describe an error at all, because it's generally okay to use an example to contradict a principle. In the argument the example actually is supposed to support the principle, not contradict it, meaning this answer misses the mark factually. I think you might have been wondering if this fits the "some evidence against is taken to prove a position false" flaw, and I see why you wondering about that connection, but I don't think the wording is quite close enough to put it in that group.
Thanks!