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Lesson help relating to our Advanced Logical Reasoning Course.
 T.B.Justin
  • Posts: 194
  • Joined: Jun 01, 2018
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#61581
Since, the conclusion is causal and mercury was commonly ingested in Beethoven's time to treat venereal disease:

Venereal Disease :arrow: Deafness

if every person in Beethoven's time ingested mercury (negation of correct answer choice):

Ingest Mercury :arrow: VD :arrow: Not Deafness (is this diagram correct?)

Based on the assumption negation technique this is logical, however in the lesson, the way you explain this I feel you think its unreasonable to assume every person that ingests mercury results in deafness (Does the author think its unreasonable because of the word "commonly" in the premise?)

I don't know how negating this weakens the causal conclusion- can you help clarify.

The way I was thinking about this is the ingestion of mercury supports the causal claim, so if thats true, is it that I am thinking about this in terms of a strengthen question type and that is why I am getting confused?
 Jon Denning
PowerScore Staff
  • PowerScore Staff
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  • Joined: Apr 11, 2011
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#61877
Hey TB - thanks for the question! This is a tricky one, but I'll do my best to help clear it up.

Since you've already spent some time analyzing and understanding this question (and watching its accompanying video), I'll skip a full stimulus deconstruction and instead get right to the heart of the matter.

To start, let's identify the conclusion, and then we'll focus on the correct answer and its negation.

..... Conclusion: if a trace of mercury is found in Beethoven's hair it will prove that Beethoven had a venereal
..... disease (which then could have caused his deafness).

Now, to the answer:

..... (B): Some people in Beethoven's time did not ingest mercury.

The negation of "some did not" is simply "all/everyone did," making the negation essentially, "Everyone in Beethoven's time ingested mercury."

Now think about what that negated statement would do to the argument. It would make it completely absurd: if everyone in Beethoven's time was ingesting mercury, then finding mercury in Beethoven's hair would tell us nothing about the cause, i.e. him having a venereal disease or not...he's just doing the same thing as everyone else, whether diseased or disease-free. So for this argument to begin to make sense it needs to be the case that mercury in Beethoven's hair was somehow special or unique (or at least not a constant for all people alive then).

Would that prove he had a venereal disease as this author is arguing? Not at all. But that isn't the point. We just need to prevent information that would destroy the argument, and that's precisely what (B) is doing!

So you're absolutely correct about this being causal—VD led to the ingestion of mercury—and a good thing to remember about causality in assumptions is that the cause and the effect NEED to be as connected to one another as possible (totally linked, in other words). Negating (B) shows the "effect" (mercury ingestion) would have been present even in the absence of the "cause" (VD), since surely not everyone alive in Beethoven's time had a venereal disease, yet all were ingesting mercury. Denying that precise cause-without-effect scenario then is something the argument/author need in order to be even potentially plausible, and that makes (B) correct as a Defender Assumption.


Finally, note that there's also an extended discussion of this question elsewhere in this Forum, found here: lsat/viewtopic.php?t=3873&p=34542. Give that a read if things are still confusing, as I think it will help further explain it :)

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